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Reaction of π Bonds Remember discussion of reaction of alkenes using orbital analysis, π bonds are far more reactive than σ bonds and they generally react as the nucleophile σ* C-C π* C-C C (p) C (sp3) C (p) C (sp3) π C-C σ C-C C-C single bonds are relatively unreactive due to large overlap of sp3 hybridized orbital and energy match, therefore very low HOMO and high LUMO energy Atomic p orbital is higher in energy than sp3 (less s character) and the overlap for p orbitals is much less to form π bond Therefore orbitals do not mix as well for π bond and thus HOMO does not lower in energy nor LUMO raise in energy as much as σ bond (already had seen this with weaker π bond) C-C π bond will thus be far more reactive, and it will react preferentially as the nucleophile due to higher HOMO level Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes Alkenes generally react in an addition mechanism (addition – two new species add to a molecule and none leave) If hydrogen halides react, then a H and Cl add to the two ends of the double bond H3C CH3 Cl !+ !H Cl CH3 H3C H Since H-Cl is polarized, the H will be partially positively charged and Cl partially negative The alkene is thus the nucleophile and the proton is the electrophile The reaction is thus a two step reaction The first step will generate a carbocation as a reactive intermediate H3C CH3 !+ !H Cl Cl CH3 H3 C H Cl CH3 H3 C H And the second step will have the carbocation react with the chloride to yield the product (the chloride is the nucleophile and the carbocation is the electrophile) Since the carbocation is the most unstable structure, the first step is the rate determining step for this reaction Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions When E-2-butene was reacted with HCl, only one product can be obtained H3C CH3 !+ !H Cl CH3 H3 C Cl Cl CH3 H3 C H H When an unsymmetrical alkene, however, like propene is reacted, two possible products are obtained (2-chloropropane or 1-chloropropane) (resulting from H and Cl adding to different ends of alkene) Cl Cl !+ !H Cl H3C H3C H3C Cl H3 C H3 C Cl Since the carbocation is the high energy structure along the reaction coordinate, the energy of activation will be determined by the stability of the possible carbocations in the first step Since 2˚ carbocations are more stable than 1˚, 2-chloropropane is the only product obtained Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions Hammond postulate is used to predict the relative rates of propene addition, because the cation is the high energy structure along the reaction coordinate the transition state for this reaction closely resembles the cation structure, thus has a high amount of positive charge on the carbon !+ H3C !H Cl H H3 C !Cl !+ H3 C H3 C H3 C Reaction Coordinate Similar to a 2˚ cation is more stable than a 1˚ cation, a partial positive charge on a 2˚ carbon is more stable than a partial positive charge on a 1˚ carbon Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions The hydrogen halide reactions with alkenes follow “Markovnikov” addition Markovnikov addition – in an electrophilic addition, the heavier atom adds to the more substituted carbon The physical meaning behind the Markovnikov addition is the electrophile adds in such a way to generate the most stable intermediate What does this imply for a hydrogen halide reaction? (remember that the first step is the creation of a carbocation) Cl Cl !+ !H Cl H3C Cl H3 C Markovnikov product H3C H3C H3 C Cl Anti-Markovnikov product Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions When considering an addition to an alkene, need to look at the two possible intermediate structures and compare their energies (the more stable one will therefore react with a faster rate) Some factors that could influence stability: Resonance effects We have observed previously that especially with charged species, structures that can resonate the charge onto multiple atoms are more stable than compounds that isolate the charge on a single atom pKa ~16 H3 C H2 C O O O 4.8 H3C O H3C O Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions The same effect can be observed in the carbocation intermediates for alkene additions Cl CH3 H3C Cl CH3 H3 C H Cl or Which is favored? Cl Cl CH3 H3 C H3C CH2CH3 CH3 Cl CH3 The chlorine atom has lone pair of electrons which can delocalize into empty p orbital of cation for resonance stabilization The reaction of Z-2-butene with HCl thus only yields 2,2-dichlorobutane Cl H3 C CH3 Cl H Cl H3 C Cl Cl CH3 H3 C CH3 Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions Any atom with lone pair of electrons adjacent to empty p orbital can stabilize cation through resonance, realize though that resonance can only occur with orbital alignment between adjacent atoms OCH3 H+ OCH3 OH H2O OCH3 OCH3 The proton adds in the first step to generate the carbocation adjacent to the oxygen due to resonance from the lone pair stabilizing the cation, thus directing the regiochemistry Because the cation is more stable with resonance, the relative rate compared to alkenes without the possibility of resonance is higher Relative Rate (25˚C) H+/H2O OCH3 OH OCH3 H+/H2O OH 5 x 1014 1 Regiochemistry of Alkene Additions Resonance can also occur with extended p orbitals on adjacent carbon atoms We observed the reaction of butadiene in discussing kinetic versus thermodynamic reactions Isolated 1˚ cation H+ or 2˚ cation in resonance !+ OH2 H2 O OH !+ !+ OH2 OH !+ Partial charge on 2˚ carbon more stable than 1˚ carbon, therefore top pathway is the kinetic pathway More substituted double bond is more stable, therefore bottom pathway is the thermodynamic pathway In practice, kinetic pathway is favored at low temperatures and thermodynamic pathway is favored at high temperatures Effect of Hyperconjugation on Carbocation Stability We have already observed that cations with more alkyl substituents are more stable than cations with less alkyl substituents CH3 H3C H CH3 H3 C H CH3 H3 C H H H H Stability The reason is due to a type of resonance with the neighboring C-H bond called “hyperconjugation” H H H2C CH3 CH3 The electrons in the neighboring C-H bond stabilize the empty p orbital by donating electron density This effect can only occur with a neighboring carbon, therefore 3˚ > 2˚ > 1˚ > methyl cation H H H H H H H H The interaction is similar, but different, than the interaction between two p orbitals in an alkene (less interaction due to further distance in hyperconjugation) Inductive Effects on Carbocation Stability In addition to resonance and hyperconjugation, inductive effects can alter carbocation stability Inductive means “through bond” Both resonance and hyperconjugation occur through overlap of orbitals, not through the σ bond H H H H H Overlap of p orbitals H H H H Hyperconjugation !-Cl H!+ H H H Inductive Inductive effects, therefore, are due to dipoles caused by differences in electronegativity Inductive Effects on Carbocation Stability Inductive effects can either stabilize a carbocation (if electron donating towards cation) or destabilize a carbocation (if electron withdrawing from a cation) Consider the electrophilic reaction of an allyl chloride Cl Cl HCl Cl Cl !+ The dipole of C-Cl bond causes a partial positive charge to be placed adjacent to carbocation, therefore destabilizing the cation Relative Rates (25 ˚C) CH3 1 OCH3 Cl Cl 2 x 106 5 x 1014 1 x 10-4 Faster than 1 hyperconjugation resonance inductive resonance Resonance effect outweighs the inductive effect for these examples Rearrangements in Alkene Additions Rearrangements can occur whenever a carbocation is formed as an intermediate in a reaction We observed carbocation intermediates in both E1 and SN1 reactions Electrophilic addition of HX or H+/H20 to alkenes also form carbocation intermediates and thus rearrangements may occur if a more stable carbocation can be formed after rearrangement H3C CH3 HCl H3 C CH3 H3C CH3 CH3 H3C H3C H3C Cl CH3 H3 C CH3 CH3 As with all rearrangements, whether a hydride shift or alkyl shift, the orbitals must be aligned to allow the rearrangement to occur CH3 H3 C H3 C H CH3 H CH3 H No overlap of orbitals, rearrangement cannot occur Rearrangements in Alkene Additions In addition to the energy gain from going to a more substituted carbocation through rearrangements, a shift could be energetic driven by formation of a more stable ring system OH OH H+, H2O 4-membered ring 5-membered ring (more stable) Can also observe rearrangements to form smaller rings (would need some other energy driving force) OH H+, H2O OH OH OH Resonance stabilized Need to have a vicinal diol (called Pinacol rearrangement) O Hydroboration of Alkenes We have already observed that alkenes can be converted to alcohols by reacting with acidic water OH H+, H2O H3C H3 C H3C CH3 CH3 A carbocation is formed as an intermediate which drives the reaction to Markovnikov product Alcohols can also be formed from alkenes using a hydroboration route Boron is less electronegative than carbon and thus can react as an electrophile H3C 1) BH3•THF 2) H2O2, NaOH H3 C The reaction yields a different regioproduct (Anti-Markovnikov) OH Hydroboration of Alkenes Boron is to the left of carbon in the periodic table B C N O F *therefore boron is electropositive compared to carbon The neutral form of boron, BH3, is unstable (it only has 6 electrons in the outer shell) Boron often is complexed with an oxygen containing species to offer stability O Tetrahydrofuran (THF) BH3 !+ !O BH3 BH3•THF Hydroboration of Alkenes Due to the electropositive character of BH3, it will act as an electrophile in alkene reactions H3C BH3•THF H3C BH3 H3C !+ H !BH2 H H3 C BH2 A free carbocation is not formed however as the reaction never rearranges regardless of structure of the alkene A cyclic transition state occurs instead where one of the B-H bonds is transferred to the carbon, this process stabilizes the structure as the carbon never bears a full positive charge The regiochemistry occurs which places the partial positive charge on the carbon better able to stabilize the charge, after the transition state is passed and the hydrogen has been transferred, the boron is located on the least substituted carbon and the hydrogen on the more H3C CH3 H3C 1) BH3•THF 2) H2O2, NaOH H3C CH3 H3 C OH Hydroboration of Alkenes The boron can then be removed in a second step with basic hydrogen peroxide H H3 C BH2 H3C H H3C BR2 OH O BR2 OOH H3 C H3 C The boron can react 2 more times with alkene The oxidized boron then rearranges to a boronic ester [B(OR)3] The boronic ester becomes hydrolyzed under the same basic aqueous conditions to generate the Anti-Markovnikov alcohol H3 C OBR2 NaOH H2 O H3 C OH OBR2 Hydroboration of Alkenes Due to the boron and hydrogen adding in a cyclic transition state, both must attach to the same side of the double bond (SYN addition) BH3•THF BH2 H Upon oxidation, the alcohol replaces the boron in the same stereochemical position, therefore the alcohol and the H added in the first step are in a SYN orientation BH2 H H2O2, NaOH OH H Formation of Alcohols from Alkenes The methods shown can create different regio- and stereoproducts from alkenes H+, H2O OH Acidic aqueous conditions forms the Markovnikov product, carbocation is formed which can rearrange if possible 1) BH3•THF 2) H2O2, NaOH H OH Hydroboration/Oxidation conditions forms the Anti-Markovnikov product, no free carbocation is formed and addition occurs in a SYN manner Methanol versus Ethanol Biochemically Ethanol (which is known to lower inhibitions and cause a lightheadedness) is oxidized biochemically to acetaldehyde O H alcohol dehydrogenase aldehyde dehydrogenase O H O OH The physiological side effects of consuming ethanol are due to the buildup of acetaldehyde (causes nausea, dizziness, sweating, headaches, lower blood pressure) The acetaldehyde is then oxidized biochemically to acetic acid Some people have a nonfunctioning aldehyde dehydrogenase enzyme -these people experience the side effects of acetaldehyde with low ethanol consumption Methanol versus Ethanol Biochemically Methanol also gets oxidized by the same enzyme O H alcohol dehydrogenase O H H But due to one less carbon, this oxidation creates formaldehyde not acetaldehyde Formaldehyde is toxic to the body because it disrupts other essential enzymes form working properly Ethanol is consumed ~25 times faster than methanol by this enzyme Cationic Polymerization Alkenes can also react to form polymers (suffix –mer comes from Greek word meros, meaning “part”) CH3 CH3 CH3 H3C CH3 H+ H3 C H3C CH3 Initially form most stable carbocation H3C CH3CH3 H3C H3 C CH3 If neither nucleophile or base are present, This carbocation could react carbocation can react with nucleophiles (SN1) with another alkene to or have a hydrogen form a “dimer” abstracted with base (E1) n Polyisobutylene The 3˚ cation of the dimer structure can continue to react with alkenes to form a polymer structure Polymerization will continue until the concentration of alkene becomes low and competes with either SN1 or E1 which will terminate the polymerization