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Lecture 28 - Nucleophilic Substitution vs. Elimination: Reading Assignment For Today

This document discusses the competition between nucleophilic substitution (SN1, SN2) and elimination (E1, E2) reactions based on the properties of the reagent and electrophile. It explains that SN2 occurs for primary electrophiles when the reagent is a strong nucleophile only. E2 occurs for secondary and tertiary electrophiles when the reagent is both a strong nucleophile and base. For weak nucleophiles and bases, unimolecular reactions SN1 and E1 are favored for tertiary electrophiles. Primary and secondary electrophiles do not react under these conditions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
87 views3 pages

Lecture 28 - Nucleophilic Substitution vs. Elimination: Reading Assignment For Today

This document discusses the competition between nucleophilic substitution (SN1, SN2) and elimination (E1, E2) reactions based on the properties of the reagent and electrophile. It explains that SN2 occurs for primary electrophiles when the reagent is a strong nucleophile only. E2 occurs for secondary and tertiary electrophiles when the reagent is both a strong nucleophile and base. For weak nucleophiles and bases, unimolecular reactions SN1 and E1 are favored for tertiary electrophiles. Primary and secondary electrophiles do not react under these conditions.

Uploaded by

Ben Hsu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture28 NucleophilicSubstitutionvs.

Elimination Chem 210

ReadingAssignmentforToday: chapters7.3,7.4,7.5,7.6

textbookproblems:7.31,7.32
practiceproblemslistedoncanvasforLecture28
FilesSupplementalIntermediateProblemSets

ReadingAssignmentforMonday: chapter7
Lecture28 Review:EnergyDiagramsSN1,SN2,E1andE2 Chem 210

SN1: unimolecular nucleophilic substitution SN2: bimolecular nucleophilic substitution

E E Nu C LG transition state
rate-determining step
Nu
X
X

C
carbocation

Nu

starting RACEMIC starting INVERSION


materials products MIXTURE materials products

reaction progress reaction progress

rate = k [electrophile] rate = k [electrophile] [nucleophile]

E1: unimolecular elimination E2: bimolecular elimination

-hydrogen
atom H
Base
E rate-determining step C C E
transition state
X
X -hydrogen
rotation atom H
around C-C
anti
carbocation bond
LG

C C
H Higher substituted product
is favored UNLESS base
starting Mixture of products: starting is sterically hindered!
materials products E and Z materials products

reaction progress reaction progress


rate = k [electrophile] rate = k [electrophile] [Base]
CompetitionbetweenSN1,SN2,E1andE2 Chem 210
Competition between SN1, SN2, E1 and E2

nucleophile only Nucleophile/Lewis Base Electrophile Product Explanation

unhindered anion with pKa


of conj. acids <15
uncharged sp3 (N,P,S) 1 SN2 Reagent functions as a nucleophile only:
examples: reagent is a
When the reagent functions exclusively as a nucleophile (and not as a base), only
substitution reactions occur for 1 and 2 electrophiles. 3 electrophiles are
Cl Br I N3 CN nucleophile only 2 SN2
sterically more hindered and will result in mixtures of SN1 products and E1
O
products (if -hydrogen atom is present) if the reaction is conducted in a polar
HS RS -H necessary for elimination
R O reaction solvent that stabilizes intermediate carbocations.
3 SN1 E1
R3P R3N RSH H2S polar medium necessary

strong nucleophile
& strong base Reagent is a strong nucleophile and strong base:
unhindered anion with pKa 1 SN2 For 1 electrophiles, the SN2 product is favored. 2 and 3 electrophiles are sterically
of conj. acids 15-30 reagent is a more hindered and the E2 reaction mechanism is preferred.
examples:
strong nucleophile
& strong base 2 E2 important: acetylides will undergo SN2
HO H3CO
nBuLi H3C I
-H necessary for elimination H3C H H3C Li H3C
H3CH2CO
3 E2 pKa = 26
nucleophile SN2 CH3

weak nucleophile
& weak base 1 no reaction
Reagent is a weak nucleophile and a weak base:
examples: reagent is a
Under these conditions, unimolecular reactions (SN1 and E1) are favored for 3
H2O weak nucleophile
2 no reaction electrophiles. No reaction occurs for 1 and 2 electrophiles. A polar solvent is
& weak base
R-OH needed - either polar protic solvent (H2O or ROH) or polar aprotic solvent
-H necessary for elimination (DMF, DMSO or HMPA) to stabilize the intermediate carbocation.
RCO2H
3 SN1 E1
or resonance-stabilized polar medium necessary
carbocation
base only if unhindered
and no -H
strong bases with pKa of Reagent functions as a strong base only:
conj. acids > 30 1 E2 or SN2
reagent is a with unhindered When the reagent functions exclusively as a base (and not as a nucleophile), only
hindered bases with pKa
base elimination reactions occur. Such reagents are generally strong bases, resulting in
of conj. acids > 10
base only 2 E2 an E2 process. This mechanism is not sensitive to steric hindrance of the
examples:
electrophile and can occur for primary, secondary, and tertiary substrates. For 1
H
N -H necessary for elimination electrophiles without a -hydrogen atom, SN2 products are observed.

N O 3 E2
DBU

polar medium: polar protic solvent (H2O or ROH) or polar aprotic solvent (DMF, DMSO or HMPA) to stabilize the carbocation.

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