Alkenes: Addition Reactions of Alkenes Flashcards
What are electrophiles?
- Electron-pair acceptors
- Electron deficient species
What happens during an electrophilic addition reaction?
- Double bond in an alkene opens up and atoms are added to carbon atoms
Why do alkenes undergo electrophilic addition reactions?
- Double bond has plenty of electrons so is easily attacked by electrophiles
What are the most common electrophiles?
- HBr
- Br2
- H2SO4
What compounds are formed from electrophilic addition reactions?
- Alcohols (from reactions with water)
- Halogenoalkanes (from reactions with hydrogen halides)
Describe a mechanism for an electrophilic addition reaction
- The pi bond repels the electrophile, inducing a temporary dipole with 𝛿+ and 𝛿- charges
- Two electrons from C=C attack the 𝛿+ charged atom, breaking the bonds within the electrophile (X-Y)
- 𝛿+ atom from electrophile (X) bonds to a carbon, leaving other carbon with a positive charge - carbocation
- The Y- ion from electrophile has lone pair of electrons
- Y- ion attacks carbocation, forming new bond with other carbon
What is a carbocation?
- An ion with a positively-charged carbon
How many products can be formed from addition of hydrogen halides to unsymmetrical alkenes?
- 2
What factor affects the amount of each product formed from addition of hydrogen halides to alkenes?
- 2 products not formed in equal quantities - major and minor product
- Depends on how stable the carbocation intermediate formed is
What are the different types of carbocations?
• Primary carbocation - 1⁰
- When a carbon atom with a positive charge has one R group bonded to it
- R group is alkyl group - alkane with H removed, CH3
• Secondary carbocation - 2⁰
- When a carbon atom with a positive charge has 2 R groups bonded to it
• Tertiary carbocation - 3⁰
- When a carbon atom with a positive charge has 3 R groups bonded to it
Which carbocations are more stable and why?
- Carbocations with more alkyl groups are more stable
- The alkyl groups move their negatively charged electrons closer to carbocation, which helps to stabilise the positive charge
Which carbocations are more likely to form?
- More stable carbocations are more likely to form than less stable carbocations
- More stable carbocation - major product
- Less stable carbocation - minor product
How do you test for unsaturation/alkenes?
- When you shake an alkene with orange bromine water, the solution turns from orange to colourless
- Bromine is added across C=C to form a colourless dibromoalkane - happens via electrophilic addition
Describe the mechanism and conditions involved in a reaction between an alkene and water to form an alcohol
- H+ ion from sulfuric acid acts as electrophile
- C=C is broken after it attacks H+ ion and forms a carbocation
- Oxygen in water has lone pair it donates to carbocation
- Oxygen has 3 bonds and positive charge
- Oxygen from HSO4 donates electrons to H from water bonded to carbon
- Forms alcohol and reforms sulfuric acid
- Sulfuric acid catalyst
- Sulfuric acid reforms
How would you turn the product (from sulfuric acid + ethene) into an alcohol and how does this show that sulfuric acid catalyses the addition of water to an alkene?
- React sulphuric acid and ethene to make ethyl hydrogensulfate
- Add water to ethyl hydrogensulfate (CH3CH2OSO2OH)
- H2SO4 reforms, showing it catalyses the hydration of alkenes