Organic Chemistry Chapter 7
Organic Chemistry Chapter 7
Organic Chemistry Chapter 7
McMurry
www.cengage.com/chemistry/mcmurry
Chapter 7
Alkenes: Structure and Reactivity
Saturated is C6H14
therefore 4 H's are not present
This has two degrees of unsaturation
Two double bonds?
or triple bond?
or two rings?
or ring and double bond?
Degree of Unsaturation With Other
Elements
Organohalogens (X: F, Cl, Br, I)
Halogen replaces hydrogen
C4H6Br2 and C4H8 have one degree of unsaturation
Degree of Unsaturation
(Continued)
Organoxygen compounds (C,H,O) – Oxygen forms 2
bonds
these don't affect the formula of equivalent
hydrocarbons
May be ignored in calculating degrees of
unsaturation
Organonitrogen Compounds
Number the carbons in chain so that double bond carbons have lowest possible numbers
Naming Alkenes (Continued)
Sequential states
on a reaction path
that are close in
energy are likely
to be close in
structure - G. S.
Hammond
Competing Reactions and the
Hammond Postulate
Normal Expectation: Faster reaction gives more stable
intermediate
Intermediate resembles transition state
7.11 Evidence for the Mechanism of
Electrophilic Addition: Carbocation
Rearrangments
Carbocations undergo
structural
rearrangements
following set patterns
1,2-H and 1,2-alkyl
shifts occur
Goes to give
moststable carbocation
Can go through less
stable ions as
intermediates
Hydride shifts in biological
molecules
Let’s Work a Problem
Addition of HCl to 1-isopropylcyclohexene yields a
rearranged product. Propose a mechanism, showing the
structures of the intermediates and using curved arrows
indicate electron flow in each step.
The hydrogen is approached by the There is a “Methyl” shift, creating a new C-H
nucleophilic double bond. A new C-H bond bond with the 1st 3˚ carbocation to give an
is formed, along with a 3˚ carbocation. At isomeric 3˚ carbocation that is less
the same time, Cl takes on 1more electron, hindered.
making it a Cl anion.
The Cl-ion then approaches the new
carbocation. A Cl-C bond is formed which
gives charged neutral product.
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