Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH...

29
Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice
  • date post

    21-Dec-2015
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    217
  • download

    0

Transcript of Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH...

Page 1: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Chapter 9

Reactions of Alkanes

Radicals

Irene LeeCase Western Reserve

UniversityCleveland, OH

©2004, Prentice Hall

Organic Chemistry 4th Edition

Paula Yurkanis Bruice

Page 2: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Petroleum is a complex mixture of alkanes and cycloalkanes that can be separated by distillation

Page 3: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Alkanes are very unreactive compounds because they have only strong bonds and atoms with no partial charges

However, alkanes do react with Cl2 and Br2

Page 4: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Reaction of Alkane with Cl2 or Br2

Page 5: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.
Page 6: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Factors that determine product distribution …

The rate-determining step of the overall reaction is hydrogen abstraction

Page 7: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Consider the relative stabilities of alkyl radicals,

The stable alkyl radical is formed faster, therefore 2-chlorobutane is formed faster

Page 8: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

pg 341 middle

Page 9: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

In determining the relative amounts of products obtained,both probability and reactivity should be considered

probability: the number of hydrogens that can be abstracted that will lead to the formation of the particular product

reactivity: the relative rate at which a particular hydrogenis abstracted

Page 10: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.
Page 11: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.
Page 12: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

The Reactivity–Selectivity PrincipleA bromine radical is less reactive and more selective than a chlorine radical

Page 13: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Why are the relative rates of radical formation so different between the bromine versus the chlorine radical?

Page 14: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

The more reactive a species is, the less selective it will be

Page 15: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

What about fluorination and iodination?

Alkanes undergo chlorination and bromination, but notiodination Fluorination is too violent of a reaction to be useful

Page 16: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Consider the relative stabilities of radicals

Page 17: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

The more stable radicals form faster

Radical Substitution of Benzylic Hydrogens

Page 18: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Because of the reactivity of allylic hydrogens,

a milder brominating reagent can be used

Page 19: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Advantage: the low concentration of Br2 and HBr presentcannot be added to the double bond

Page 20: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

The allylic radical has two resonance contributors

CH3CH2CH CH2 CH3CHCH CH2 CH3CH

CH3CH2CH CH2 CH3CH2CH CH2

+

Br

+

Br

+

CHCH2+

HBr

Br2

Page 21: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Stereochemistry of Radical Substitution Reactions

Page 22: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Why are both enantiomers formed?

Consider the first propagation step

Page 23: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

What happens if the reactant already has an asymmetriccarbon and the radical substitution reaction creates a second asymmetric carbon?

Page 24: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Reactions of Cyclic Compounds

+ Cl2 h

I

+ HCl

+ Br2h

Br

+ HBr

+ HBr

+ NBS

peroxide

Br

Br

Page 25: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Reactions of Cyclopropane

Page 26: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Radical Reactions in Biological Systems

Page 27: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.
Page 28: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Radicals and Stratospheric Ozone

• ozone is a major constituent of smog

• ozone shields the Earth from harmful radiation

O2

O3

hO + O

O + O2

Page 29: Chapter 9 Reactions of Alkanes Radicals Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry 4 th Edition Paula.

Chlorofluorocarbons remain very stable in the atmosphere until they reach the stratosphere

C ClF

Cl

F

hCF

Cl

F

+ Cl

The chlorine radicals are ozone-removing agents

Cl + O3 ClO + O2

ClO + O3 Cl + 2 O2