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Covalent Bonds / Shapes

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Title: Covalent Bonds / Shapes


1
Reactions of Alkenes
Chapter 6
2
Characteristic Reactions
3
Characteristic Reactions
4
Reaction Mechanisms
  • A reaction mechanism describes how a reaction
    occurs
  • which bonds are broken and which new ones are
    formed
  • the order and relative rates of the various
    bond-breaking and bond-forming steps
  • if in solution, the role of the solvent
  • if there is a catalyst, the role of a catalyst
  • the position of all atoms and energy of the
    entire system during the reaction

5
Gibbs Free Energy
  • Gibbs free energy change, DG0 a thermodynamic
    function relating enthalpy, entropy, and
    temperature
  • exergonic reaction a reaction in which the Gibbs
    free energy of the products is lower than that of
    the reactants the position of equilibrium for an
    exergonic reaction favors products
  • endergonic reaction a reaction in which the
    Gibbs free energy of the products is higher than
    that of the reactants the position of
    equilibrium for an endergonic reaction favors
    starting materials

6
Gibbs Free Energy
  • a change in Gibbs free energy is directly related
    to chemical equilibrium
  • summary of the relationships between DG0, DH0,
    DS0, and the position of chemical equilibrium

7
Energy Diagrams
  • Enthalpy change, DH0 the difference in total
    bond energy between reactants and products
  • a measure of bond making (exothermic) and bond
    breaking (endothermic)
  • Heat of reaction, DH0 the difference in enthalpy
    between reactants and products
  • exothermic reaction a reaction in which the
    enthalpy of the products is lower than that of
    the reactants a reaction in which heat is
    released
  • endothermic reaction a reaction in which the
    enthalpy of the products is higher than that of
    the reactants a reaction in which heat is
    absorbed

8
Energy Diagrams
  • Energy diagram a graph showing the changes in
    energy that occur during a chemical reaction
  • Reaction coordinate a measure in the change in
    positions of atoms during a reaction

9
Activation Energy
  • Transition state
  • an unstable species of maximum energy formed
    during the course of a reaction
  • a maximum on an energy diagram
  • Activation Energy, ?G the difference in Gibbs
    free energy between reactants and a transition
    state
  • if ?G is large, few collisions occur with
    sufficient energy to reach the transition state
    reaction is slow
  • if ?G is small, many collisions occur with
    sufficient energy to reach the transition state
    reaction is fast

10
Energy Diagram
  • a one-step reaction with no intermediate

11
Energy Diagram
  • A two-step reaction with one intermediate

12
Developing a Reaction Mechanism
  • How it is done
  • design experiments to reveal details of a
    particular chemical reaction
  • propose a set or sets of steps that might account
    for the overall transformation
  • a mechanism becomes established when it is shown
    to be consistent with every test that can be
    devised
  • this does mean that the mechanism is correct,
    only that it is the best explanation we are able
    to devise

13
Why Mechanisms?
  • they are the framework within which to organize
    descriptive chemistry
  • they provide an intellectual satisfaction derived
    from constructing models that accurately reflect
    the behavior of chemical systems
  • they are tools with which to search for new
    information and new understanding

14
Electrophilic Additions
  • hydrohalogenation using HCl, HBr, HI
  • hydration using H2O in the presence of H2SO4
  • halogenation using Cl2, Br2
  • halohydrination using HOCl, HOBr
  • oxymercuration using Hg(OAc)2, H2O followed by
    reduction

15
Addition of HX
  • Carried out with pure reagents or in a polar
    solvent such as acetic acid
  • Addition is regioselective
  • regioselective reaction an addition or
    substitution reaction in which one of two or more
    possible products is formed in preference to all
    others that might be formed
  • Markovnikovs rule in the addition of HX, H2O,
    or ROH to an alkene, H adds to the carbon of the
    double bond having the greater number of hydrogens

16
HBr 2-Butene
  • A two-step mechanism
  • Step 1 proton transfer from HBr to the alkene
    gives a carbocation intermediate
  • Step 2 reaction of the sec-butyl cation (an
    electrophile) with bromide ion (a nucleophile)
    completes the reaction

17
HBr 2-Butene
  • An energy diagram for the two-step addition of
    HBr to 2-butene
  • the reaction is exergonic

18
Carbocations
  • Carbocation a species in which a carbon atom has
    only six electrons in its valence shell and bears
    positive charge
  • Carbocations are
  • classified as 1, 2, or 3 depending on the
    number of carbons bonded to the carbon bearing
    the positive charge
  • electrophiles that is, they are electron-loving
  • Lewis acids

19
Carbocations
  • bond angles about a positively charged carbon are
    approximately 120
  • carbon uses sp2 hybrid orbitals to form sigma
    bonds to the three attached groups
  • the unhybridized 2p orbital lies perpendicular to
    the sigma bond framework and contains no electrons

20
Carbocation Stability
  • a 3 carbocation is more stable than a 2
    carbocation, and requires a lower activation
    energy for its formation
  • a 2 carbocation is, in turn, more stable than a
    1 carbocation,
  • methyl and 1 carbocations are so unstable that
    they are never observed in solution

21
Carbocation Stability
  • relative stability
  • methyl and primary carbocations are so unstable
    that they are never observed in solution

22
Carbocation Stability
  • we can account for the relative stability of
    carbocations if we assume that alkyl groups
    bonded to the positively charged carbon are
    electron releasing and thereby delocalize the
    positive charge of the cation
  • we account for this electron-releasing ability of
    alkyl groups by (1) the inductive effect, and (2)
    hyperconjugation

23
The Inductive Effect
  • the positively charged carbon polarizes electrons
    of adjacent sigma bonds toward it
  • the positive charge on the cation is thus
    localized over nearby atoms
  • the larger the volume over which the positive
    charge is delocalized, the greater the stability
    of the cation

24
Hyperconjugation
  • involves partial overlap of the ?-bonding orbital
    of an adjacent C-H or C-C bond with the vacant 2p
    orbital of the cationic carbon
  • the result is delocalization of the positive
    charge

25
Addition of H2O
  • addition of water is called hydration
  • acid-catalyzed hydration of an alkene is
    regioselective hydrogen adds preferentially to
    the less substituted carbon of the double bond
  • HOH adds in accordance with Markovnikovs rule

26
Addition of H2O
  • Step 1 proton transfer from H3O to the alkene
  • Step 2 reaction of the carbocation (an
    electrophile) with water (a nucleophile) gives an
    oxonium ion
  • Step 3 proton transfer to water gives the alcohol






H
O

H
O
H

H
H
intermediate


fast



O
H

H
H
An oxonium ion
27
Carbocation Rearrangements
  • In electrophilic addition to alkenes, there is
    the possibility for rearrangement
  • Rearrangement a change in connectivity of the
    atoms in a product compared with the connectivity
    of the same atoms in the starting material

28
Carbocation Rearrangements
  • in addition of HCl to an alkene
  • in acid-catalyzed hydration of an alkene

29
Carbocation Rearrangements
  • the driving force is rearrangement of a less
    stable carbocation to a more stable one
  • the less stable 2 carbocation rearranges to a
    more stable 3 one by 1,2-shift of a hydride ion

fast


H
H
A 3 carbocation
30
Carbocation Rearrangements
  • reaction of the more stable carbocation (an
    electrophile) with chloride ion (a nucleophile)
    completes the reaction

-

fast








2-Chloro-2-methylbutane
31
Addition of Cl2 and Br2
  • carried out with either the pure reagents or in
    an inert solvent such as CH2Cl2
  • addition of bromine or chlorine to a cycloalkene
    gives a trans-dihalocycloalkane
  • addition occurs with anti stereoselectivity
    halogen atoms add from the opposite face of the
    double bond
  • we will discuss this selectivity in detail in
    Section 6.7

32
Addition of Cl2 and Br2
  • Step 1 formation of a bridged bromonium ion
    intermediate

33
Addition of Cl2 and Br2
  • Step 2 attack of halide ion (a nucleophile) from
    the opposite side of the bromonium ion (an
    electrophile) opens the three-membered ring to
    give the product

34
Addition of Cl2 and Br2
  • for a cyclohexene, anti coplanar addition
    corresponds to trans diaxial addition
  • the initial trans diaxial conformation is in
    equilibrium with the more stable trans
    diequatorial conformation
  • because the bromonium ion can form on either face
    of the alkene with equal probability, both trans
    enantiomers are formed as a racemic mixture

35
Addition of HOCl and HOBr
  • Treatment of an alkene with Br2 or Cl2 in water
    forms a halohydrin
  • Halohydrin a compound containing -OH and -X on
    adjacent carbons

36
Addition of HOCl and HOBr
  • reaction is both regiospecific (OH adds to the
    more substituted carbon) and anti stereoselective
  • both selectivities are illustrated by the
    addition of HOBr to 1-methylcyclopentene
  • to account for the regioselectivity and the anti
    stereoselectivity, chemists propose the
    three-step mechanism in the next screen

37
Addition of HOCl and HOBr
  • Step 1 formation of a bridged halonium ion
    intermediate
  • Step 2 attack of H2O on the more substituted
    carbon opens the three-membered ring

38
Addition of HOCl and HOBr
  • Step 3 proton transfer to H2O completes the
    reaction
  • As the elpot map on the next screen shows
  • the C-X bond to the more substituted carbon is
    longer than the one to the less substituted
    carbon
  • because of this difference in bond lengths, the
    transition state for ring opening can be reached
    more easily by attack of the nucleophile at the
    more substituted carbon

39
Addition of HOCl and HOBr
  • bridged bromonium ion from propene

40
Oxymercuration/Reduction
  • Oxymercuration followed by reduction results in
    hydration of a carbon-carbon double bond
  • oxymercuration
  • reduction

41
Oxymercuration/Reduction
  • an important feature of oxymercuration/reduction
    is that it occurs without rearrangement
  • oxymercuration occurs with anti stereoselectivity

42
Oxymercuration/Reduction
  • Step 1 dissociation of mercury(II) acetate
  • Step 2 formation of a bridged mercurinium ion
    intermediate a two-atom three-center bond

43
Oxymercuration/Reduction
  • Step 3 regioselective attack of H2O (a
    nucleophile) on the bridged intermediate opens
    the three-membered ring
  • Step 4 reduction of the C-HgOAc bond

44
Oxymercuration/Reduction
  • Anti stereoselective
  • we account for the stereoselectivity by formation
    of the bridged bromonium ion and anti attack of
    the nucleophile which opens the three-membered
    ring
  • Regioselective
  • of the two carbons of the mercurinium ion
    intermediate, the more substituted carbon has the
    greater degree of partial positive character
  • alternatively, computer modeling indicates that
    the C-Hg bond to the more substituted carbon of
    the bridged intermediate is longer than the one
    to the less substituted carbon
  • therefore, the ring-opening transition state is
    reached more easily by attack at the more
    substituted carbon

45
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • Hydroboration the addition of borane, BH3, to an
    alkene to form a trialkylborane
  • Borane dimerizes to diborane, B2H6

H
H
B
B

H
Borane
Borane
46
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • borane forms a stable complex with ethers such as
    THF
  • the reagent is used most often as a commercially
    available solution of BH3 in THF

47
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • Hydroboration is both
  • regioselective (boron to the less hindered
    carbon)
  • and syn stereoselective

H

H
H
1-Methylcyclopentene
48
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • concerted regioselective and syn stereoselective
    addition of B and H to the carbon-carbon double
    bond
  • trialkylboranes are rarely isolated
  • oxidation with alkaline hydrogen peroxide gives
    an alcohol and sodium borate

49
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • Hydrogen peroxide oxidation of a trialkylborane
  • step 1 hydroperoxide ion (a nucleophile) donates
    a pair of electrons to boron (an electrophile)
  • step 2 rearrangement of an R group with its pair
    of bonding electrons to an adjacent oxygen atom

50
Hydroboration/Oxidation
  • step 3 reaction of the trialkylborane with
    aqueous NaOH gives the alcohol and sodium borate

51
Oxidation/Reduction
  • Oxidation the loss of electrons
  • alternatively, the loss of H, the gain of O, or
    both
  • Reduction the gain of electrons
  • alternatively, the gain of H, the loss of O, or
    both
  • Recognize using a balanced half-reaction
  • 1. write a half-reaction showing one reactant and
    its product(s)
  • 2. complete a material balance use H2O and H in
    acid solution, use H2O and OH- in basic solution
  • 3. complete a charge balance using electrons, e-

52
Oxidation/Reduction
  • three balanced half-reactions

53
Oxidation with OsO4
  • OsO4 oxidizes an alkene to a glycol, a compound
    with OH groups on adjacent carbons
  • oxidation is syn stereoselective

54
Oxidation with OsO4
  • OsO4 is both expensive and highly toxic
  • it is used in catalytic amounts with another
    oxidizing agent to reoxidize its reduced forms
    and, thus, recycle OsO4

55
Oxidation with O3
  • Treatment of an alkene with ozone followed by a
    weak reducing agent cleaves the CC and forms two
    carbonyl groups in its place

O
O
2-Methyl-2-pentene
56
Oxidation with O3
  • the initial product is a molozonide which
    rearranges to an isomeric ozonide

O
O
O
2-Butene
A molozonide
H
H
O
O
C
C
O
O
Acetaldehyde
An ozonide
57
Reduction of Alkenes
  • Most alkenes react with H2 in the presence of a
    transition metal catalyst to give alkanes
  • commonly used catalysts are Pt, Pd, Ru, and Ni
  • the process is called catalytic reduction or,
    alternatively, catalytic hydrogenation
  • addition occurs with syn stereoselectivity

Pd
25C, 3 atm
Cyclohexene
Cyclohexane
58
Reduction of Alkenes
  • Mechanism of catalytic hydrogenation

59
Reduction of Alkenes
  • even though addition syn stereoselectivity, some
    product may appear to result from trans addition
  • reversal of the reaction after the addition of
    the first hydrogen gives an isomeric alkene, etc.

60
?H0 of Hydrogenation
  • Reduction of an alkene to an alkane is exothermic
  • there is net conversion of one pi bond to one
    sigma bond
  • ?H0 depends on the degree of substitution
  • the greater the substitution, the lower the value
    of ?H
  • ?H0 for a trans alkene is lower than that of an
    isomeric cis alkene
  • a trans alkene is more stable than a cis alkene

61
?H0 of Hydrogenation
62
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • In several of the reactions presented in this
    chapter, chiral centers are created
  • Where one or more chiral centers are created, is
    the product
  • one enantiomer and, if so, which one?
  • a pair of enantiomers as a racemic mixture?
  • a meso compound?
  • a mixture of stereoisomers?
  • As we will see, the stereochemistry of the
    product for some reactions depends on the
    stereochemistry of the starting material that
    is, some reactions are stereospecific

63
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • We saw in Section 6.3D that bromine adds to
    2-butene to give 2,3-dibromobutane
  • two stereoisomers are possible for 2-butene a
    pair of cis,trans isomers
  • three stereoisomers are possible for the product
    a pair of enantiomers and a meso compound
  • if we start with the cis isomer, what is the
    stereochemistry of the product?
  • if we start with the trans isomer, what is the
    stereochemistry of the product?

64
Bromination of cis-2-Butene
  • reaction of cis-2-butene with bromine forms
    bridged bromonium ions which are meso and
    identical

65
Bromination of cis-2-Butene
  • attack of bromide ion at carbons 2 and 3 occurs
    with equal probability to give enantiomeric
    products as a racemic mixture

66
Bromination of trans-2-Butene
  • reaction with bromine forms bridged bromonium ion
    intermediates which are enantiomers

67
Bromination of trans-2-Butene
  • attack of bromide ion in either carbon of either
    enantiomer gives meso-2,3-dibromobutane

68
Bromination of 2-Butene
  • Given these results, we say that addition of Br2
    or Cl2 to an alkene is stereospecific
  • bromination of cis-2-butene gives the enantiomers
    of 2,3-dibromobutane as a racemic mixture
  • bromination of trans-2-butene gives
    meso-2,3-dibromobutane
  • Stereospecific reaction a reaction in which the
    stereochemistry of the product depends on the
    stereochemistry of the starting material

69
Oxidation of 2-Butene
  • OsO4 oxidation of cis-2-butene gives
    meso-2,3-butanediol

70
Oxidation of 2-Butene
  • OsO4 oxidation of an alkene is stereospecific
  • oxidation of trans-2-butene gives the enantiomers
    of 2,3-butanediol as a racemic mixture (optically
    inactive)
  • and oxidation of cis-2-butene gives meso
    2,3-butanediol (also optically inactive)

71
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • We have seen two examples in which reaction of
    achiral starting materials gives chiral products
  • in each case, the product is formed as a racemic
    mixture (which is optically inactive) or as a
    meso compound (which is also optically inactive)
  • These examples illustrate a very important point
    about the creation of chiral molecules
  • optically active (enantiomerically pure) products
    can never be produced from achiral starting
    materials and achiral reagents under achiral
    conditions
  • although the molecules of product may be chiral,
    the product is always optically inactive (either
    meso or a pair of enantiomers)

72
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • Next let us consider the reaction of a chiral
    starting material in an achiral environment
  • the bromination of (R)-4-tert-butylcyclohexene
  • only a single diastereomer is formed
  • the presence of the bulky tert-butyl group
    controls the orientation of the two bromine atoms
    added to the ring

73
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • Finally, consider the reaction of an achiral
    starting material in an chiral environment
  • BINAP can be resolved into its R and S enantiomers

74
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • treating (R)-BINAP with ruthenium(III) chloride
    forms a complex in which ruthenium is bound in
    the chiral environment of the larger BINAP
    molecule
  • this complex is soluble in CH2Cl2 and can be used
    as a homogeneous hydrogenation catalyst
  • using (R)-BINAP-Ru as a hydrogenation catalyst,
    (S)-naproxen is formed in greater than 98 ee

75
Reaction Stereochemistry
  • BINAP-Ru complexes are somewhat specific for the
    types of CC they reduce
  • to be reduced, the double bond must have some
    kind of a neighboring group that serves a
    directing group
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