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Organic Chemistry – Basic Principles (Reaction Mechanism)



Fundamental Concepts In Organic Reaction Mechanism


Understanding organic reaction mechanisms is essential for predicting the products of reactions and designing synthetic pathways. It involves studying how reactions occur at a molecular level.

Fission Of A Covalent Bond

Covalent Bond: A covalent bond is formed by the sharing of electrons between two atoms.

Homolytic Fission:

Heterolytic Fission:

Substrate And Reagent

Substrate: The molecule or ion upon which the reagent acts. It is the starting material in an organic reaction that undergoes transformation.

Reagent: The molecule or ion that attacks the substrate, bringing about the chemical change. Reagents are often responsible for initiating the reaction by interacting with the substrate.

Classification of Reagents: Reagents are classified based on the type of species they generate during heterolytic fission:

Electron Movement In Organic Reactions

Curved Arrows: The movement of electron pairs in organic reactions is depicted using curved arrows. The tail of the arrow starts at the source of the electron pair (a bond or a lone pair), and the head points to where the electron pair moves (an atom, a bond, or between two atoms).

Importance: Understanding electron movement is key to drawing reaction mechanisms and understanding how bonds are formed and broken.

Electron Displacement Effects In Covalent Bonds

The distribution of electron density in a covalent molecule can be influenced by the electronegativity differences between atoms and the arrangement of electrons. These effects are crucial for understanding reactivity.

Inductive Effect

Description: The inductive effect is the permanent displacement of $\sigma$-electrons along a carbon chain due to a difference in electronegativity between the bonded atoms. It operates through the sigma ($\sigma$) bond framework.

Types:

Nature: It is a permanent effect but weakens rapidly with distance.

Applications: Explains the acidity of carboxylic acids, basicity of amines, and stability of carbocations and carbanions.

Resonance Structure

Description: Resonance is a concept used to describe the delocalization of $\pi$ electrons (and sometimes lone pairs) in molecules where a single Lewis structure cannot adequately represent the bonding. Resonance structures are different hypothetical Lewis structures that can be drawn for a molecule or ion, differing only in the arrangement of $\pi$ electrons and lone pairs.

Conditions for Resonance:

Resonance Hybrid: The actual structure of the molecule is a weighted average of all contributing resonance structures, called the resonance hybrid. The resonance hybrid is more stable than any of the individual contributing structures.

Representation: Resonance structures are connected by double-headed arrows ($\leftrightarrow$).

Example: Benzene ($C_6H_6$). The actual structure is a resonance hybrid of two Kekulé structures.

Resonance Energy: The difference in energy between the resonance hybrid and the most stable contributing structure is called resonance energy, which contributes to the stability of the molecule.

Resonance Effect

Description: The resonance effect is the delocalization of $\pi$ electrons or lone pairs through a conjugated system, which results in a partial charge distribution across different atoms. It is often represented by curved arrows showing electron movement.

Types:

Nature: It is a permanent effect and can influence reactivity, acidity, basicity, and stability.

Electromeric Effect (E Effect)

Description: The electromeric effect is a temporary effect where the $\pi$ electrons of a multiple bond (double or triple) are completely transferred to one of the atoms in the multiple bond in the presence of an attacking reagent.

Types:

Nature: It is a temporary effect and occurs only in the presence of an attacking reagent. It is a characteristic of multiple bonds.

Example: Addition of $H^+$ to ethene ($CH_2=CH_2$):

$$CH_2=CH_2 + H^+ \rightarrow [CH_3-\stackrel{+}{C}H_2 \leftrightarrow CH_3-CH_2^+]$$

(The $\pi$ electrons move towards one carbon, forming a carbocation on the other).

Hyperconjugation

Description: Hyperconjugation is the delocalization of $\sigma$ electrons of $C-H$ bonds adjacent to an $sp^2$ hybridized carbon atom (or other unsaturated system) by the overlap of the $\sigma$ orbital with the empty $p$ orbital or $\pi$ orbital of the unsaturated system.

Conditions: Requires $\alpha$-hydrogens (hydrogens attached to the carbon atom adjacent to the $sp^2$ or $sp$ hybridized carbon). It is sometimes called the 'no-bond resonance'.

Nature: It is a permanent effect.

Applications: Explains the stability of carbocations, alkenes, and alkyl-substituted benzene rings. The more $\alpha$-hydrogens, the greater the hyperconjugation, and hence greater stability.

Example: Stability of carbocations:

$CH_3^+ > CH_3CH_2^+ > (CH_3)_2CH^+ > (CH_3)_3C^+$ (This order is generally incorrect; it should be the opposite). The correct order of stability of carbocations is:

$(CH_3)_3C^+ > (CH_3)_2CH^+ > CH_3CH_2^+ > CH_3^+$. This is because tertiary carbocations have more $\alpha$-hydrogens (9) than secondary (6), primary (3), and methyl (0), leading to greater stabilization by hyperconjugation.

Types Of Organic Reactions And Mechanisms

Organic reactions can be broadly classified based on the way bonds are broken and formed:

1. Substitution Reactions:

2. Addition Reactions:

3. Elimination Reactions:

4. Rearrangement Reactions:

Reaction Mechanisms: Organic reaction mechanisms describe the step-by-step pathway of a reaction, showing the movement of electrons, the formation of intermediates (like carbocations, carbanions, free radicals), and the transition states.