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Electrophilic Substitution Reactions of Benzene

Electrophilic Substitution Reactions of Benzene. Aim: To describe the electrophilic substitution of arenes with concentrated nitric acid in the presence of concentrated sulphuric acid. Outline the mechanism of the above reaction. The Reactions of Benzene.

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Electrophilic Substitution Reactions of Benzene

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  1. Electrophilic Substitution Reactions of Benzene • Aim: • To describe the electrophilic substitution of arenes with concentrated nitric acid in the presence of concentrated sulphuric acid. • Outline the mechanism of the above reaction.

  2. The Reactions of Benzene • The reactions of benzene usually involve the replacement of 1or more hydrogen atoms on the ring being replaced by a functional group in a SUBSTITUTION reaction. • Substitution allows the ring to retain its delocalised Π system of electrons and its stability. • Stability means it is far less reactive than its electron cloud would suggest. In fact it needs a catalyst for reactions to take place.

  3. Why are aromatic compounds so unreactive? • Although there is a delocalised Π cloud above and below the plane of the ring electrophiles are far less attracted to the cloud than they are in alkenes. • In ethene, for example there are 2 Π electrons per single covalent bond which form a region of localised high electron density which attracts electrophiles readily. • In benzene there are 6 electrons delocalised over the whole 6 bonds in the ring, leading to a much lower (1/2?) electron density.

  4. Mechanism of electrophilic substitution • The electrophile must carry a full positive charge. • Catalysts are usually required. • Benzene is very important in the chemical industry. • Used to make: • Explosives, dyes, pharmaceuticals, insecticides, detergents, polymers etc. • Explosives and dyes are derived from NITROBENZENE.

  5. Nitration of Benzene • Neither nitric acid nor sulphuric acid will react with benzene. • However NITRATING MIXTURE does, readily and exothermically. • At 50oC use equal volumes conc HNO3 and conc H2SO4 • C6H6 +HNO3→ C6H5NO3 + H2O Nitrobenzene Yellow oil bp 211oC

  6. production of the electrophile • the benzene ring is a centre of high electron density which makes it susceptible to electrophilic attack • the nitryl cation, NO2+, is the electrophile in this reaction • it is produced by the reaction of concentrated nitric acid with concentrated sulphuric acid

  7. the initial reaction HNO3 + H2SO4 HSO4- + H2 NO3+ H2 NO3+ + H2SO4→ H3O+ + NO2+ + H3O+ i.e. HNO3 + 2H2SO4→ NO2+ + 2HSO4- +H3O+ • the sulphuric acid acts as a catalyst in this reaction • it is regenerated later in the reaction mechanism

  8. mechanism • the benzene molecule has 6 delocalised electrons in a molecular orbital • the NO2+electrophile is attracted to this centre of high electron density situated above and below the ring • an electron pair move from the delocalised ring system to the NO2+ forming a new covalent bond

  9. electrons move from the benzene ring towards the electrophile electrophilic attack

  10. the intermediate formed is very unstable Note that the positive charge is delocalised over 5 carbon atoms

  11. mechanism • the stable delocalised ring system is reformed as the unstable intermediate breaks down • the covalent bond between the hydrogen and the carbon atom in the benzene ringbreaks heterolytically • the delocalised benzene ring system is reformed

  12. the hydrogen - carbon bond breaks the delocalised molecular orbital reforms

  13. the products the H+ reacts with HSO4- to regenerate sulphuric acid

  14. mechanism • the product of this reaction is nitrobenzene • this is an electrophilic substitution reaction • the halogens e.g.chlorine will undergo a similar reaction with benzene in the presence of a catalyst such as aluminium chloride producing chlorobenzene • CARE!!benzene andchlorine undergo an addition reaction in the presence of UV light the product is1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane

  15. NO2 H NO2 + Electrophilic Substitution 1 – Nitration of benzene H2SO4 + HNO3 NO2+ + HSO4- + H2O +NO2 H+ home

  16. Br H Br + Electrophilic Substitution 2 – Bromination of benzene Br2 + AlCl3 Br+ + AlBrCl3- +Br HBr home AlCl3

  17. CH3 H CH3 + Electrophilic Substitution 3 – Alkylation of benzene CH3Cl + AlCl3 CH3+ + AlCl4- +CH3 HCl home AlCl3

  18. O O C CH3 +C CH3 H O CH3 + C Electrophilic Substitution 4 – Acylation of benzene CH3COCl + AlCl3 CH3CO+ + AlCl4- HCl home AlCl3

  19. CH3 CH3 CH3 Br H Br + Bromination of methylbenzene – ring substitution Br2 + AlBr3 Br+ + AlBr4- Br+ HBr home AlBr3

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