Aromatic Compounds Flashcards
What is an aliphatic?
Straight or branched chain organic substances
What is an aromatic or arene?
Includes one or more rings of six carbon atoms with delocalised bonding
How are the electrons bonded in benzene?
Carbon is bonded to two other carbons and one hydrogen via single sigma bonds. This leaves one electron in a p orbital to form a delocalised ring.
What evidence is there for the delocalised structure of benzene?
- Bond length intermediate between short double bonded carbon atoms and long single bonded carbon atoms.
- The enthalpy of hydrogenation is less exothermic than expected when compared to the hydrogenation for the Kekule structure.
- Only reacts with Br2 at high temperatures or in the presence of a halogen carrier.
Why does benzene not generally undergo addition reactions?
This would result in breaking up the stable delocalised system.
Benzene usually undergoes…?
Electrophilic substitution
Why do reactions with bromine occur more easily with alkenes rather than benzene?
In benzene, electrons in the pi bond are delocalised whereas in alkenes, the electrons in the pi bonds are localised between two carbon atoms.
Benzene therefore has a lower electron density and therefore polarises bromine less and induces a weaker dipole in bromine than an alkene would.
Why does bromine react more readily with phenol than benzene?
OH is an electron donating group, making the ring more negative. This repels electrons in Br2 which makes it easier to induce a dipole. Phenol is more attractive to electrophiles.
What is an electrophile?
Lone pair acceptor
Nitration of Benzene:
- Change in functional group?
- Reagents?
- Mechanism?
- Electrophile?
- Change in functional group: Benzene -> Nitrobenzene
- Reagents: Concentrated HN)3, H2SO4 (catalyst)
- Mechanism: Electrophilic Substitution
- Electrophile: NO2+
What is the equation for the formation of the electrophile in the nitration of benzene?
HNO3 + 2H2SO4 -> NO2+ + 2H2SO4- + H3O+
Halogenation of Benzene:
- Change in functional group?
- Reagents?
- Mechanism?
- Electrophile?
- Change in functional group: Benzene -> Bromobenzene
- Reagents: Bromine, Iron bromide catalyst (Halogen Carrier)
- Mechanism: Electrophilic Substitution
- Electrophile: Br+
What is the equation for the formation of electrophiles in the halogenation of benzene?
AlCl3 + Cl2 -> AlCl4- + Cl+
Febr3 + Br2 -> FeBr4- + Br+
Friedel Crafts Alkylation:
- Change in functional group?
- Reagents?
- Mechanism?
- Change in functional group: Benzene -> Akylbenzene
- Reagents: Chloroalkane in the presence of anhydrous AlCl3 catalyst. Heat under reflux.
- Mechanism: Electrophilic Substitution
What is the equation for the formation of the electrophile in the Friedel Crafts Alkylation?
AlCl3 + CH3CH2Cl -> CH3CH2+ AlCl4-