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Aryl Halides Ar-X Organic compounds with a halogen atom attached to an aromatic carbon are very different from those compounds where the halogen is attached to an aliphatic compound. While the aliphatic compounds readily undergo nucleophilic substitution and elimination reactions, the aromatic compounds resist nucleophilic substitution, only reacting under severe conditions or when strongly electron withdrawing groups are present ortho/para to the halogen. Aryl halides, syntheses: 1. From diazonium salts Ar-N2+ + CuCl Ar-Cl Ar-N2+ + CuBr Ar-Br Ar-N2+ + KI Ar-I Ar-N2+ + HBF4 Ar-F 2. Halogenation Ar-H + X2, Lewis acid Ar-X + HX X2 = Cl2, Br2 Lewis acid = FeCl3, AlCl3, BF3, Fe… reactions of alkyl halides Ar-X 1. SN2 NR 2. E2 NR 3. organo metallic compounds similar 4. reduction similar Ag+ -OH X -OR aryl halide NH3 C C X vinyl halide -CN ArH AlCl3 NO REACTION Bond Lengths (Å) C—Cl C—Br CH3—X 1.77 1.91 C2H5—X 1.77 1.91 (CH3)3C—X 1.80 1.92 CH2=CH—X 1.69 1.86 C6H5—X 1.69 1.86 sp3 sp2 In aryl halides, the carbon to which the halogen is attached is sp2 hybrizided. The bond is stronger and shorter than the carbon-halogen bond in aliphatic compounds where the carbon is sp3 hybridized. Hence it is more difficult to break this bond and aryl halides resist the typical nucleophilic substitution reactions of alkyl halides. The same is true of vinyl halides where the carbon is also sp2 hybridized and not prone to nucleophilic substitution. In a manner analogous to the phenols & alcohols, we have the same functional group in the two families, aryl halides and alkyl halides, but very different chemistries. Aryl halides, reactions: 1. Formation of Grignard reagent 2. EAS 3. Nucleophilic aromatic substitution (bimolecular displacement) (Ar must contain strongly electron withdrawing groups ortho and/or para to X) 4. Nucleophilic aromatic substitution (elimination-addition) (Ring not activated to bimolecular displacement) 1) Grignard reagent Br Mg anhyd. Et2O Mg Cl THF MgBr MgCl 2) EAS The –X group is electron-withdrawing and deactivating in EAS, but is an ortho/para director. Br Br Br NO2 + HNO3, H2SO4 NO2 Br SO3H + Br H2SO4,SO3 Br SO3H Br Br Br2,Fe + Br Br CH3CH2-Br, AlCl3 CH2CH3 + Br CH2CH3 3) Nucleophilic aromatic substitution (bimolecular displacement) Ar must contain strongly electron withdrawing groups ortho and/or para to the X. Cl NH2 NO2 NO2 + NH3 NO2 NO2 Br O2N O2N NO2 OCH3 NO2 + NaOCH3 NO2 NO2 Cl + NaOH NR OH 350oC, 4500 psi H+ OH Cl 15% NaOH, 160oC H+ NO2 NO2 OH Cl O2N NO2 NO2 warm water O2N NO2 NO2 NH2 Cl NH3, Cu2O, 200oC, 900 psi NH2 Cl NO2 NH3, 170oC NO2 NO2 NO2 NH3 Cl O2N NO2 NO2 NH3, room temp. O2N NO2 NO2 bimolecular displacement (nucleophilic aromatic substitution) mechanism: Z 1) 2) RDS X + :Z Z X X Z + :X Z X Z Z Z X X X Z X Z G X G If G is an electron withdrawing group in the ortho and para positions, it will stabilize the intermediate anion. evidence for the bimolecular displacement mechanism: no element effect : Ar-I Ar-Br Ar-Cl Ar-F (the C—X bond is not broken in the RDS) 4) Elimination-Addition, nucleophilic aromatic substitution. When the ring is not activated to the bimolecular displacement and the nucleophile is an extremely good one. NH2 Br + NaNH2, NH3 Li F + Li H2O Elimination-Addition mechanism (nucleophilic aromatic substitution) X X H : + :NH2 1) + NH3 elimination X : + :X 2) benzyne : 3) NH2 + :NH2 addition H : 4) NH2 NH2 + NH3 + :NH2 While the concept of “benzyne” may appear to be strange, there is much evidence that this mechanism is correct. NH2 Cl * NaNH2 * + * NH2 NH3 47% * = 14C 53% Br H3C OCH3 NaNH2 NR NH3 Cl Cl H D + :NH2 benzyne intermediate has been trapped in a Diels-Alder condensation: +