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© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 1 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which gets the chlorine? CH 3 C CH 3 CH 2 HCl CH 3 C CH 3 Cl CH 3 CH 3 CH CH 3 CH 2 Cl + or

© Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

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Page 1: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 1

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes

What about the following reaction?

Which sp2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which gets the chlorine?

CH3 C

CH3

CH2HCl CH3 C

CH3

Cl

CH3 CH3 CH

CH3

CH2Cl+ or

Page 2: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 2

Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes The more substituted carbocation is

preferred

Page 3: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 3

Stability of Carbocations Alkyl groups (“R”s) tend to stabilize the

positive charge on the sp2 carbon of a carbocation

Page 4: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 4

Stability of Carbocations Alkyl groups are more polarizable than

hydrogen (i.e. they tend to release electrons more easily than does hydrogen)

Also, alkyl groups can release electrons via hyperconjugation

Page 5: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 5

Stability of Carbocations Alkyl groups bonded to the sp2 carbon of

a carbocation tend to spread out the positive charge, thereby stabilizing the carbocation

Page 6: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 6

The Hammond Postulate

Carbocation formation is endergonic - hence transition state is closest to the carbocation

Page 7: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 7

The Hammond Postulate Formation of a tertiary carbocation should

be faster than formation of a primary carbocation

Page 8: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 8

Regioselectivity - Markovnikov’s Rule

“When a hydrogen halide adds to an asymmetrical alkene, the addition occurs such that the halogen attaches itself to the carbon atom of the alkene bearing the least number of hydrogen atoms”

Page 9: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 9

Markovnikov’s Rule Modern equivalent statement: The electrophile adds to the sp2 carbon

that is bonded to the greater number of hydrogens

Page 10: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 10

Addition of Water

Page 11: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 11

Rearrangements of Carbocations

1,2-Hydride Shift

Page 12: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 12

Rearrangements of Carbocations

1,2-Methyl Shift

Page 13: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 13

Addition of Halogens

The atoms that make up the Br2 or Cl2 molecules are very electronegative

The halogen-halogen bond is weak

Page 14: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 14

Addition of Halogens

When electrons approach a halogen molecule, one end of the halogen molecule accepts them releasing the shared bonding pair to the other halogen atom to form a halonium ion and a halide ion

Page 15: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 15

Addition of Halogens

The remaining halide ion is a good nucleophile which attacks the positively charged halonium ion

Page 16: © Prentice Hall 2001Chapter 31 Addition of Hydrogen Halides to Alkenes What about the following reaction? Which sp 2 carbon gets the hydrogen and which

© Prentice Hall 2001 Chapter 3 16

Addition of Halogens

Chlorine and bromine are the only useful halogen used for this reaction

Fluorine reacts explosively, and iodine doesn’t react

Addition reactions typically are carried out in CCl4