Title: Reactions of Benzene and its Derivatives
1Reactions of Benzene and itsDerivatives
Chapter 22
2Reactions of Benzene
- The most characteristic reaction of aromatic
compounds is substitution at a ring carbon. - This is Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution (EAS).
3Reactions of Benzene
422.1 Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
- Electrophilic aromatic substitution (EAS) a
reaction in which a hydrogen atom of an aromatic
ring is replaced by an electrophile. - To study
- several common types of electrophiles.
- how each is generated.
- the mechanism by which each replaces hydrogen.
5A. Chlorination of Benzene
- Step 1 formation of a chloronium ion.
- Step 2 attack of the chloronium ion on the ring.
6Chlorination
- Step 3 proton transfer regenerates the aromatic
character of the ring.
7EAS General Mechanism
- A general mechanism
- General question what is the electrophile and
how is it generated ?
8Bromination of Benzene
- Figure 22.1 Energy diagram for the bromination
of benzene.
9B. Formation of the Nitronium Ion
- Generation of the nitronium ion, NO2
- Step 1 proton transfer to nitric acid.
- Step 2 loss of H2O gives the nitronium ion, a
very strong electrophile.
10Nitration of Benzene
- Step 1 attack of the nitronium ion (an
electrophile) on the aromatic ring (a
nucleophile). - Step 2 proton transfer regenerates the aromatic
ring.
11Reduction of the Nitro Group
- A particular value of nitration is that the nitro
group can be reduced to a 1 amino group. - Reduction occurs with other reagents such as an
active metal (Fe, Sn or Zn) in HCl.
12Sulfonation of Benzene
- Carried out using concentrated sulfuric acid
containing dissolved sulfur trioxide. - Concentrated sulfuric acid containing dissolved
sulfur trioxide is fuming sulfuric acid. - The sulfonation reaction is reversible whereas
the halogenation and nitration reactions are not.
Benzene
13C. Friedel-Crafts Alkylation of Benzene
- Friedel-Crafts alkylation forms a new C-C bond
between an aromatic ring and an alkyl group.
14Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- Step 1 formation of an alkyl cation as an ion
pair. - Step 2 attack of the alkyl cation on the ring.
- Step 3 proton transfer regenerates aromaticity.
15Limitations on Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- There are three major limitations on
Friedel-Crafts alkylations. - 1. carbocation rearrangements are common.
-
H
16Limitations on Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- 2. F-C alkylation fails on benzene rings bearing
one or more of these strongly electron-withdrawing
groups.
17Limitations on Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- 3. Polyalkylation An alkyl group added to the
ring activates the ring and further alkylation
occurs. - Limitations 1 3 do not apply to Friedel-Crafts
Acylation reactions.
x
18Friedel-Crafts Acylation of Benzene
- Friedel-Crafts acylation forms a new C-C bond
between a benzene ring and an acyl group.
19Friedel-Crafts Acylation
- The electrophile is an acylium ion.
20Friedel-Crafts Acylation
- an acylium ion is a resonance hybrid of two major
contributing structures. - F-C acylations are free of two major limitation
of F-C alkylations acylium ions do not
rearrange nor do they polyacylate.
O
O
21Friedel-Crafts Acylation
- A special value of F-C acylations is preparation
of unrearranged alkylbenzenes.
Wolff-Kishner reduction, pg 623
22D. Other Aromatic Alkylations
- Carbocations are also generated from alkenes and
alcohols - by treatment of an alkene with a protic acid,
most commonly H2SO4, H3PO4, or HF/BF3,
23Other Aromatic Alkylations
- by treating an alkene with a Lewis acid,
- and by treating an alcohol with H2SO4 or H3PO4.
Benzene
Cyclohexene
Phenylcyclohexane
24Di- and Polysubstitution of Benzene
- Orientation
- certain substituents direct preferentially to
ortho para positions others to meta positions. - substituents are classified as either ortho-para
directing or meta directing toward further
substitution. - Rate
- certain substituents cause the rate of a second
substitution to be greater than that for benzene
itself others cause the rate to be lower. - substituents are classified as activating or
deactivating toward further substitution.
25Di- and Polysubstitution
- -OCH3 is ortho-para directing.
- -CO2H is meta directing.
26Di- and Polysubstitution, Table 22.2
27Di- and Polysubstitution
- From the information in Table 21.1, we can make
these generalizations - alkyl, phenyl, and all other substituents in
which the atom bonded to the ring has an unshared
pair of electrons are ortho-para directing all
other substituents are meta directing. - all ortho-para directing groups except the
halogens are activating toward further
substitution the halogens are weakly
deactivating.
2822.2 A. Di- and Polysubstitution, Table 22.1
- Orientation on nitration of monosubstituted
benzenes.
29Di- and Polysubstitution
- the sequence of reactions is important.
30B. Theory of Directing Effects
- The rate of EAS is limited by the slowest step in
the reaction. - For almost every EAS, the rate-determining step
is attack of E on the aromatic ring to give a
resonance-stabilized cation intermediate. - The more stable this cation intermediate, the
faster the rate-determining step and the faster
the overall reaction.
31Theory of Directing Effects
- For ortho-para directors, ortho-para attack forms
a more stable cation than meta attack. - ortho-para products are formed faster than meta
products. - For meta directors, meta attack forms a more
stable cation than ortho-para attack - meta products are formed faster than ortho-para
products.
32Theory of Directing Effects
- -OCH3 events during an unfavored meta attack.
Only three resonance structures and the cation
never appears on oxygen.
33Theory of Directing Effects
- -OCH3 events during a favored ortho-para
attack.
Four resonance structures here and the cation
does appear on oxygen.
34Theory of Directing Effects
- -CO2H events during a favored meta attack.
The cation never appears adjacent to the ()
carbon of CO.
35Theory of Directing Effects
- -CO2H events during an unfavored ortho-para
attack.
The cation appears adjacent to a () carbon of
CO.
36C. Activating-Deactivating Effects
- Any resonance effect, such as that of -NH2, -OH,
and -OR, that delocalizes the positive charge on
the cation intermediate lowers the activation
energy for its formation, and has an activating
effect toward further EAS. - Any resonance or inductive effect, such as that
of -NO2, -CN, -CO, and -SO3H, that decreases
electron density on the ring deactivates the ring
toward further EAS.
37Activating-Deactivating
- Any inductive effect, such as that of -CH3 or
other alkyl group, that releases electron density
toward the ring activates the ring toward further
EAS. - Any inductive effect, such as that of halogen,
-NR3, -CCl3, or -CF3, that decreases electron
density on the ring deactivates the ring toward
further EAS.
38Activating-Deactivating
- for the halogens, the inductive and resonance
effects run counter to each other, but the former
is somewhat stronger with respect to
deactivation. - the net effect is that halogens are deactivating
but ortho-para directing.
39Relative rates of EAS
- Relative rates of reaction for substituted
benzenes compared to unsubstituted benzene. - rel. rate
- Aniline 106 strongly activating NH2
- Toluene 25 weakly activating CH3
- Benzene 1 neutral
- Chlorobenzene 0.03 weakly deactivating Cl
- Nitrobenzene 10-6 strongly deactivating NO2
4022.3 Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution
- Aryl halides do not undergo nucleophilic aromatic
substitution (NAS) by either SN1 or SN2. - They do undergo nucleophilic substitutions, but
by mechanisms quite different from those of
nucleophilic aliphatic substitution. - There are two common mechanisms
- The benzyne mechanism.
- The addition-elimination mechanism.
- Nucleophilic aromatic substitutions are far less
common than electrophilic aromatic substitutions.
41A. Benzyne Intermediates
- When heated under pressure with aqueous NaOH,
chlorobenzene is converted to sodium phenoxide. - neutralization with HCl gives phenol.
42Benzyne Intermediates
- the same reaction with 2-chlorotoluene gives a
mixture of ortho- and meta-cresol. - the same type of reaction can be brought about
using of sodium amide in liquid ammonia.
43Benzyne Intermediates
- ?-elimination of HX gives a benzyne intermediate,
that then adds the nucleophile to give products.
Benzyne is unstable due to poor orbital
overlap, brackets mean that this is a transient
intermediate.
44B. Addition-Elimination
- when an aryl halide contains electron-withdrawing
NO2 groups ortho and/or para to X, nucleophilic
aromatic substitution takes place more readily. - neutralization with HCl gives the phenol.
45Meisenheimer Complex
- reaction involves a Meisenheimer complex
intermediate.
46Reaction of Benzene and its Derivatives
End Chapter 22