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ORGANIC REACTIONS. Types of Reactions. Substitution: Polar Non-polar. Rearrangement. Definitions. Mechanism: Complete step-by-step of exactly which bonds break and which bonds form and in what order.
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ORGANIC REACTIONS Dr Seemal Jelani
Types of Reactions • Substitution: • Polar • Non-polar Dr Seemal Jelani
Rearrangement Dr Seemal Jelani
Definitions • Mechanism: Complete step-by-step of exactly which bonds break and which bonds form and in what order. • Thermodynamics: The study of the energy changes that occur in chemical transformations. This allows for comparison of stability of reactants and products. • Kinetics: The study of reaction rates, determining which products are formed most rapidly. One can predict how the rate will change with changing conditions. Dr Seemal Jelani
Reaction Profile (Exothermic) Dr Seemal Jelani
2nd Order Reaction Dr Seemal Jelani
1st Order Reaction Dr Seemal Jelani
Bond Breaking:Non-polar and Polar Dr Seemal Jelani
Bond Forming:Non-polar and Polar Dr Seemal Jelani
Non-polar Reaction Involves Free Radicals Dr Seemal Jelani
Free Radicals are Neutral, but Electron-Deficient Dr Seemal Jelani
Free Radical Chlorination Dr Seemal Jelani
Experimental Evidence Helps to Determine Mechanism • Chlorination does not occur at room temperature in the dark. • The most effective wavelength of light is blue that is strongly absorbed by Cl2 gas. • The light-initiated reaction has a high quantum yield (many molecules of product are formed from each photon of light). Dr Seemal Jelani
Free Radical Species are Constantly Generated Throughout the ReactionPropagation Dr Seemal Jelani
Termination: Reaction of any 2 Radicals Dr Seemal Jelani
Enthalpy • It is the change that occurs in a system when one mole of matter is transformed by a chemical reaction under standard conditions Bond Dissociation Energy • the amount of energy which is required to homolytically fracture a chemical bond Dr Seemal Jelani
Enthalpy of Reaction (DHo) Measures Difference in Strength of Bonds Broken and Bonds FormedBond Dissociation Energy Dr Seemal Jelani
DHo = Sbonds broken-Sbonds formed Dr Seemal Jelani
Chlorination of Propane Dr Seemal Jelani
Chlorinationof Methylpropane Dr Seemal Jelani
3o Radicals are Easiest to Form Dr Seemal Jelani
Stability of Free Radicals Dr Seemal Jelani
Chlorofluorocarbons and the Depletion of Ozone Dr Seemal Jelani
Polar ReactionsNucleophilic substitution reaction • Theme One Nucleophile is substituted for another nucleophile • General reaction Dr Seemal Jelani
DEFINITION OF A NUCLEOPHILE • A species that loves a nucleus • Since nuclei are positively charged, so nucleophiles are negatively charged or bear a partial negative charge • Examples are lone pairs or a hydroxide ion. • Nucleophile is an electron rich species. Dr Seemal Jelani
ELECTROPHILES • An ion or molecule that is electron deficient and can accept electrons • Electrophiles are often reducing agents and Lewis acids • They are either positive ions (e.g. NO2+) or Dr Seemal Jelani
molecules that have a positive charge on a particular atom(e.g. SO3, which has an electron-deficient sulphur atom) • In organic reactions they tend to attack negatively charged parts of a molecule Dr Seemal Jelani
CLASSIFICATION OF NUCLEOPHILIC • Nucleophiles can be classified according to the kind of atom that forms a new covalent bond. 1. Oxygen Nucleophile (HO-, CH3O) 2. Nitrogen Nucleophiles (NH3, RNH2…) Dr Seemal Jelani
3 Sulfur Nucleophiles (HS-, RS- …) 4 Halogen Nucleophiles (I-..) Dr Seemal Jelani
Polar Reactions:Nucleophiles & Electrophiles Dr Seemal Jelani
Nucleophiles are BasesElectrophiles are Acids Dr Seemal Jelani
Addition of HBr to Ethylene Dr Seemal Jelani
DGo = DHo - TDSo Dr Seemal Jelani
Reactions Often Go Through Intermediates Dr Seemal Jelani
Transition State Dr Seemal Jelani
Addition Reaction is a Two-Step Mechanism Dr Seemal Jelani
How Many Mechanistic Steps?How Many Intermediates?How Many Transition States?Which Step is Rate-Determining? Dr Seemal Jelani