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CHE 242 Unit VI The Study of Conjugated Systems, Aromaticity and Reactions of Aromatic Compounds CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Terrence P. Sherlock Burlington County College 2004 Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Electrophile substitutes for a hydrogen on the benzene ring. => Chapter 17 2 Mechanism => Chapter 17 3 Bromination of Benzene • Requires a stronger electrophile than Br2. • Use a strong Lewis acid catalyst, FeBr3. Br Br FeBr3 Br Br H Br Animation H H H H FeBr3 H H H Br Br FeBr3 + H H _ + FeBr4 Animation H H Animation Br + Chapter 17 HBr => 4 Energy Diagram for Bromination => Chapter 17 5 Chlorination and Iodination • Chlorination is similar to bromination. Use AlCl3 as the Lewis acid catalyst. • Iodination requires an acidic oxidizing agent, like nitric acid, which oxidizes the iodine to an iodonium ion. + H + + HNO3 + 1/2 I2 I + NO2 + H2O => Chapter 17 6 Nitration of Benzene Use sulfuric acid with nitric acid to form the nitronium ion electrophile. O H O S O H O H O H O N H O N + O O O H O H O N + O O H2O + N+ O Chapter 17 _ + HSO4 NO2+ then forms a sigma complex with benzene, loses H+ to form nitrobenzene. => 7 Sulfonation Sulfur trioxide, SO3, in fuming sulfuric acid is the electrophile. O _ O O S S+ O O O O O S+ _ O O _ O S O O H O S O + O H _ S + O O HO O S O benzenesulfonic acid => Chapter 17 8 Nitration of Toluene • Toluene reacts 25 times faster than benzene. The methyl group is an activator. • The product mix contains mostly ortho and para substituted molecules. => Chapter 17 9 Sigma Complex Intermediate is more stable if nitration occurs at the ortho or para position. Chapter 17 => 10 Energy Diagram Chapter 17 => 11 Activating, O-, PDirecting Substituents • Alkyl groups stabilize the sigma complex by induction, donating electron density through the sigma bond. • Substituents with a lone pair of electrons stabilize the sigma complex by resonance. OCH3 + OCH3 NO2 NO2 + H H Chapter 17 => 12 The Amino Group Aniline reacts with bromine water (without a catalyst) to yield the tribromide. Sodium bicarbonate is added to neutralize the HBr that’s also formed. NH2 NH2 Br Br 3 Br2 H2O, NaHCO3 Br Chapter 17 => 13 Summary of Activators Chapter 17 14 => Deactivating MetaDirecting Substituents • Electrophilic substitution reactions for nitrobenzene are 100,000 times slower than for benzene. • The product mix contains mostly the meta isomer, only small amounts of the ortho and para isomers. • Meta-directors deactivate all positions on the ring, but the meta position is less deactivated. => Chapter 17 15 Ortho Substitution on Nitrobenzene => Chapter 17 16 Para Substitution on Nitrobenzene => Chapter 17 17 Meta Substitution on Nitrobenzene => Chapter 17 18 Energy Diagram => Chapter 17 19 Structure of MetaDirecting Deactivators • The atom attached to the aromatic ring will have a partial positive charge. • Electron density is withdrawn inductively along the sigma bond, so the ring is less electron-rich than benzene. => Chapter 17 20 Summary of Deactivators => Chapter 17 21 More Deactivators => Chapter 17 22 Halobenzenes • Halogens are deactivating toward electrophilic substitution, but are ortho, para-directing! • Since halogens are very electronegative, they withdraw electron density from the ring inductively along the sigma bond. • But halogens have lone pairs of electrons that can stabilize the sigma complex by resonance. => Chapter 17 23 Sigma Complex for Bromobenzene Para attack Ortho attack Br Br + (+) + E Br Br (+) H E (+) + (+) (+) E+ (+) H E Ortho and para attacks produce a bromonium ion and other resonance structures. Meta attack Br Br H (+) + + H E (+) No bromonium ion possible with meta attack. E => Chapter 17 24 Multiple Substituents The most strongly activating substituent will determine the position of the next substitution. May have mixtures. OCH3 OCH3 SO3H SO3 O2N H2SO4 OCH3 + O2N O2N SO3H => Chapter 17 25 Friedel-Crafts Alkylation • Synthesis of alkyl benzenes from alkyl halides and a Lewis acid, usually AlCl3. • Reactions of alkyl halide with Lewis acid produces a carbocation which is the electrophile. • Other sources of carbocations: alkenes + HF or alcohols + BF3. => Chapter 17 26 Examples of Carbocation Formation Cl CH3 CH CH3 _ CH3 + C Cl AlCl3 H3C H + AlCl3 _ H2C CH CH3 OH H3C CH CH3 BF3 F + H3C CH CH3 HF + BF3 H O H3C CH CH3 Chapter 17 _ + H3C CH CH3 + HOBF3 => 27 Formation of Alkyl Benzene CH3 H +C H + CH3 H F H + CH(CH3)2 CH(CH3)2 F - B OH CH3 F CH + CH3 H HF F B OH F => Chapter 17 28 Limitations of Friedel-Crafts • Reaction fails if benzene has a substituent that is more deactivating than halogen. • Carbocations rearrange. Reaction of benzene with n-propyl chloride and AlCl3 produces isopropylbenzene. • The alkylbenzene product is more reactive than benzene, so polyalkylation occurs. => Chapter 17 29 Friedel-Crafts Acylation • Acyl chloride is used in place of alkyl chloride. • The acylium ion intermediate is resonance stabilized and does not rearrange like a carbocation. • The product is a phenyl ketone that is less reactive than benzene. => Chapter 17 30 Clemmensen Reduction Acylbenzenes can be converted to alkylbenzenes by treatment with aqueous HCl and amalgamated zinc. O O + CH3CH2C Cl 1) AlCl3 C CH2CH3 2) H2O Zn(Hg) CH2CH2CH3 aq. HCl => Chapter 17 31 Gatterman-Koch Formylation • Formyl chloride is unstable. Use a high pressure mixture of CO, HCl, and catalyst. • Product is benzaldehyde. O H C Cl CO + HCl + AlCl3/CuCl O O C+ C H _ + H C O AlCl4 + HCl H Chapter 17 32 => Benzyne Mechanism • Reactant is halobenzene with no electronwithdrawing groups on the ring. • Use a very strong base like NaNH2. Chapter 17 => 33 Benzyne Intermediate NH2 H NH2 NH2 _ NH2 H H H _ or H H CH3 H H H CH3 H CH3 H H CH3 para-toluidine meta-toluidine Chapter 17 => 34 Chlorination of Benzene • Addition to the benzene ring may occur with high heat and pressure (or light). • The first Cl2 addition is difficult, but the next 2 moles add rapidly. • The product, benzene hexachloride, is an insecticide. => Chapter 17 35 Catalytic Hydrogenation • Elevated heat and pressure is required. • Possible catalysts: Pt, Pd, Ni, Ru, Rh. • Reduction cannot be stopped at an intermediate stage. CH3 CH3 3 H2, 1000 psi Ru, 100°C CH3 Chapter 17 CH3 => 36 Side-Chain Oxidation Alkylbenzenes are oxidized to benzoic acid by hot KMnO4 or Na2Cr2O7/H2SO4. CH(CH3)2 - KMnO4, OH CH CH2 H2O, heat _ COO _ COO => Chapter 17 37 Side-Chain Halogenation • Benzylic position is the most reactive. • Chlorination is not as selective as bromination, results in mixtures. • Br2 reacts only at the benzylic position. Br CH2CH2CH3 Br2, h CHCH2CH3 => Chapter 17 38 SN1 Reactions • Benzylic carbocations are resonancestabilized, easily formed. • Benzyl halides undergo SN1 reactions. CH2Br CH3CH2OH, heat CH2OCH2CH3 => Chapter 17 39 SN2 Reactions • Benzylic halides are 100 times more reactive than primary halides via SN2. • Transition state is stabilized by ring. => Chapter 17 40 Reactions of Phenols • Some reactions like aliphatic alcohols: phenol + carboxylic acid ester phenol + aq. NaOH phenoxide ion • Oxidation to quinones: 1,4-diketones. O OH Na2Cr2O7, H2SO4 => CH3 CH3 Chapter 17 O 41 Electrophilic Substitution of Phenols • Phenols and phenoxides are highly reactive. • Only a weak catalyst (HF) required for Friedel-Crafts reaction. • Tribromination occurs without catalyst. • Even reacts with CO2. O _ _ O - CO2, OH O C OH O _ + O C H OH => Chapter 17 salicylic acid 42 POWER POINT IMAGES FROM “ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 5TH EDITION” L.G. WADE ALL MATERIALS USED WITH PERMISSION OF AUTHOR PRESENTATION ADAPTED FOR BURLINGTON COUNTY COLLEGE ORGANIC CHEMISTRY COURSE BY: ANNALICIA POEHLER STEFANIE LAYMAN CALY MARTIN Chapter 17 43