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Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry: Alkenes - Reactions and Synthesis
Overview of Alkenes
Alkenes react with various electrophiles to produce molecules with functional groups.
Reactions of Alkenes
Preparation of alkenes is commonly through elimination reactions.
Key reactions with alkenes include:
Dehydration
Dehydrohalogenation
Hydrohalogenation
Halogenation
Halohydrin formation
Acid-catalyzed hydration
Oxymercuration
Hydroboration
Addition of alcohol
Simmons-Smith reaction
Hydrogenation
Epoxidation
Hydroxylation of epoxides and alkenes
Ozonolysis
Oxidation with KMnO4
Oxidation with dilute KMnO4
Preparation of Alkenes
Dehydrohalogenation
: Involves the loss of HX from an alkyl halide using a strong base (E2 mechanism).
Dehydration
: Produces alkenes by removing water from alcohols, occurs under strong acid conditions (e.g., sulfuric acid).
Reactivity order: 3º > 2º > 1º (tertiary alcohols are most reactive).
Mechanism of Dehydration
Protonation
: Alcohol’s OH group turns into a better leaving group (H2O).
Formation of Carbocation
: Water leaves leading to carbocation formation.
Deprotonation
: Weak base abstracts a proton, yielding alkene.
Carbocation Rearrangement
Carbocations can rearrange to more stable forms, shifting towards stability if nearby positions offer greater stabilization.
Markovnikov vs Non-Markovnikov Addition
Markovnikov Addition
Involves the formation of more stable carbocation, where the electrophile adds to the more substituted carbon.
Non-Markovnikov Addition
A radical intermediate results in the electrophile adding to the less substituted carbon, mainly in reactions with peroxide.
Hydrohalogenation Mechanism with Peroxide
Initiation
: Formation of a radical from the peroxide.
Br Addition
: Addition to the least substituted carbon.
Hydrogen Abstraction
: Resulting in an anti-Markovnikov product.
Halogenation of Alkenes
Reaction with X2 (e.g., Br2 or Cl2) produces 1,2-dihalides with anti stereochemistry, favoring trans products.
Mechanism of Halogenation
Involves stereochemical inversion during the bromine attack.
Halohydrin Formation
Reaction of an alkene with X2 and H2O produces a halohydrin.
OH adds to the more substituted carbon (Markovnikov), X to the less substituted.
Anti sterochemical addition.
Mechanism for Halohydrin Formation
Alkene reacts with halogen to form a bromonium ion.
Nucleophilic water attacks the more substituted carbon.
Resulting in racemic alcohols with inversion.
Acid-Catalyzed Hydration
Adds water across an alkene in a Markovnikov manner, forming a carbocation which may rearrange.
Mechanism of Acid-Catalyzed Hydration
Protonation
: The double bond is protonated to form carbocation.
Water Attack
: A nucleophilic attack occurs with water.
Deprotonation
: Produces the alcohol.
Hydroboration-Oxidation
A two-step reaction where BH3 adds to the alkene in a non-Markovnikov fashion, followed by oxidation to form alcohols.
Syn addition occurs during hydroboration.
Oxymercuration-Demercuration
Adds water in a Markovnikov fashion without carbocation rearrangement.
Epoxidation and Hydrolysis
Epoxidation
Adds an oxygen atom across the double bond to form an epoxide (syn addition).
Hydrolysis of Epoxides
Leads to trans 1,2-dialcohols with anti addition.
Oxidative Cleavage of Alkenes
Achieved with KMnO4 or O3. Results in carbonyl compounds based on the number of substituents on the alkene.
Key Points in Alkene Cleavage
Cleavage with KMnO4 yields carboxylic acids/ketones based on substituents.
Ozonolysis forms aldehydes or ketones depending on substitution.
Multistep Reactions
Often, chemists carry out multiple reactions in sequence for synthesis goals. Understanding each step is crucial for predicting products.
Practice Problems
Engage with practice questions and multistep syntheses to strengthen understanding and application of concepts.
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Chapter 29 Quiz
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Ultimate Guide: ApesEnvironmental Science (copy)
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Chapter 12: History of key ideas
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Studied by 8 people
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US HIST 1301-Unit 4 Key Terms
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Grammar
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Chapter 16 - Kinetics: Rates and Mechanisms of Chemical Reactions
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