Chapter 17 – Reactions of Aromatic Compounds
- Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
- General reaction - an electrophile replaces a hydrogen
- Electrons of pi system attack strong electrophile, generating resonance-stabilized carbocation intermediate (sigma complex)
This is the slow step because it breaks up the aromaticity.
- Loss of a proton restores aromaticity
- Nitration
- Generation of the nitronium ion
- Electrophilic attack
- Loss of proton
- Sulfonation
- SO3 is also a powerful electrophile, but less so.
- This reaction is reversible – Steam it!
- Halogenation
- Bromination
- Bromine reacts with FeBr3 to form the electrophile
- Electrophilic attack
- Loss of proton
- Chlorination
- Just like bromination, but you use chlorine and FeCl3
- Iodination
- Nitric acid is used as a reagent instead of a metal catalyst to generate I+
- Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- Alkyl choride + AlCl3 form a carbocation-like structure
- It is important to note that this is likely still complexed with the Lewis acid catalyst.
- You don’t really get the free carbocation, but it acts as though you do.
- The carbocation acts as the electrophile
- Another way to alkylate
- When you start with an alkene and add a non-nucleophilic acid, you can generate a carbocation.
- This carbocation can now be the electrophile for Alkylation.
- Limitations of Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
- The carbocation can rearrange, so if you’re trying to add a straight chain, this won’t work.
- Overalkylation
- We will see that alkyl groups are activators for this reaction, so once you put one alkyl group on the addition of a second alkyl group is even easier.
- Does not work on deactivated rings.
- Friedel-Crafts Acylation
- AlCl3 removes the Cl from an acid chloride
- This cation is resonance-stabilized, so you really do get it.
- This is called the acyllium ion and you do need to know its name!
- The carbonyl and alkyl group add to the ring
- How Friedel-Crafts Acylation gets over two of the limitations of Alkylation
- No rearrangement
- You will not overacylate, because once you put the acyl group on, you have deactivated the ring
- It still does not work on deactivated rings.
Name of Reaction / Reagents / Electrophile / What Replaces the H
Nitration / HNO3/H2SO4 / Nitronium ion
(NO2+) / NO2
Sulfonation / H2SO4
(SO3 sometimes) / SO3 or HSO3+ / SO3H
Bromination / Br2, FeBr3 / “Br+” / Br
Chlorination / Cl2, FeCl3 / “Cl+” / Cl
Iodination / I2, HNO3 / I+ / I
Alkylation / RCl/AlCl3 or RBr/FeBr3 / “R+” / R
Acylation / Acid chloride/ AlCl3 / Acyllium ion
/
- Substituent Effects
- We talked about Electron Donating Groups (EDGs) vs. Electron Withdrawing Groups (EWGs) in Chapter 15 when talking about Diels-Alder
- Which category would make this reaction go faster?
- The slow step is the step where the electrons of the aromatic system attack the electrophile, so having greater electron density would make this slow step more likely to occur.
- As such, we will call EDGs “activating” and EWGs “deactivating”
- Halogens are weird. We’ll see why.
- Ortho, para-directors
- Ortho, para-directors are EDGs. Why?
- Think again about that sigma complex. Let’s look at brominating phenol.
- Not only does having an EDG on the positively charged carbon stabilize by induction, but when the EDG donates by resonance as well, you also get an additional resonance form.
- A similar series of drawings can be made with para-addition
- When you halogenate at a meta position, the positive charge is never stabilized by the substituent.
- The majority of ortho, para-directing groups are activating as well.
- The exception is halogens.
- Meta-directors
- All meta-directors are deactivating EWGs.
- If you put an EWG at an ortho or para position, then you destabilize the sigma complex.
- Multiple substituents
- When possible, make everyone happy.
- When you can’t make everyone happy, the most activating group determines the placement of the electrophile.
- This makes sense because basically, the activating groups want this reaction to happen, and the deactivating groups don’t want it to happen.
- The further to the right below “wins” the fight over where to put the new piece.
- Side-chain reactions
- Clemmenson Reduction
- Chops off the carbonyl of ketones
- Useful when you want to add a straight chain alkyl group.
- First, acylate, then reduce.
- Wolff-Kishner Reduction
- Overall, it’s the same reaction as Clemmenson reduction, just with different reagents.
- Benzylic Oxidation
- If the benzyllic carbon has at least one hydrogen on it, then treatment with KMnO4or chromic acid chops the rest of the chain off and turns the first carbon into a carboxylic acid.
- Halogenation goes faster at benzylic positions.
- SN1/SN2 both go faster at benzylic positions.
- Synthesis questions
- When asked to synthesize something from benzene, the task can often seem daunting.
- It’s important to remember that the more difficult synthesis questions of this material fall into two categories:
- Two meta-directors ortho or para to each other
- Step 1: Alkylate
- Step 2: Put the other piece on
- Step 3: Oxidize
- Two ortho-, para-directors meta to each other
- Step 1: Acylate
- Step 2: Put the other piece on
- Step 3: Reduce
- For both of the above schemes, remember that there could be some other intervening steps.
- Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution
- Addition-Elimination
- Recognizing that you will be doing this reaction
- There has to be a halogen on the ring.
- Vigorous, basic conditions
- Strong EWG’s ortho and/or para to the halogen
- Only time where fluorine works best!
- Because fluorine is the most electronegative, it creates a stronger partial positive at the carbon, so the nucleophilic attack is more likely to happen.
- Overall Reaction
- The base replaces your halogen and nothing else happens.
- Step one: Strong nucleophile adds to the ring, generating carbanion intermediate
- Step two: Leaving group leaves, regenerating aromaticity.
- Elimination-Addition (Benzyne)
- Overall reaction: Halogen leaves and strong base goes where the halogen was or one away in either direction.
- Recognizing that this is the reaction you’re doing
- Halogen on the ring
- Megabase (most likely NH2-)
- Most likely something else on the ring acting as a place-holder.
- Step one: Base and substrate undergo E2-like reaction.
- This really happens in two steps, not 1.
- Step two: Base attacks benzyne intermediate and proton is picked up at other side of triple bond.
Ortho / Ortho, Meta
Meta / Ortho, Meta, Para
Para / Meta, Para
- A weird reaction of phenols!