Chapter 12 - Arenes Flashcards

1
Q

What is the molecular formula of benzene?

A

C6H6

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2
Q

How are principal functional groups (at position 1) of arenes determined?

A

-CO2H > -OH > -CH3 > -halogen > NO2; rest are named by alphabetical order

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3
Q

What is the state and colour of benzene at rtp?

A

colourless liquid; highly volatile and flammable

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4
Q

What is the melting and point of benzene?

A

Melting point: 5.5ºC

Boiling point: 80ºC

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5
Q

Why is the melting and boiling point of benzene low?

A

Being a non-polar molecule, only a small amount of energy is required to overcome the weak dispersion forces between molecules.

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6
Q

What are the health effects of benzene? (4)

A

From chronic (long term) exposure, benzene is:

1) able to cause harmful effects on the bone marrow
2) able to cause a decrease in red blood cells leading to anaemia
3) carcinogenic
4) able to cause leukaemia

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7
Q

Describe the structure of benzene. (3)

A

1) planar, aromatic molecule
2) all carbon atoms in the ring are sp2, each bonded to 2 carbons and an hydrogen atom
3) geometry around each carbon atom is trigonar planar with C–C–C bond angle of 120º.

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8
Q

How does delocalised pi electron clouds form on benzene rings?

A

the unhybridised p orbitals of each carbon are perpendicular to the plane, overlapping side-on with the unhybridised p orbitals on adjacent carbon atoms. the overlapping p orbitals produce 2 continuous rings of pi electrons above and below the plane of the benzene ring, which is known as the delocalised pi electron cloud. The 6 electrons in the cloud are free to move around.

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9
Q

What are 4 implications of the pi electron cloud delocalisation?

A

1) all carbon-carbon bond lengths in benzene are equal (intermediate between c-c and c=c length), creating a planar, regular hexagonal shape.
2) resonance stabilisation, giving rise to extra stability of benzene (also known as aromaticity of benzene)
3) because of resonance stabilisation, benzene preferably undergoes electrophilic substitution, where one or more hydrogen atoms can be substituted by electrophiles, preserving its aromaticity.
4) due to resonance stabilisation, the pi electron cloud in benzene is less susceptible to attack by electrophiles than C=C, thus requiring a stronger electrophile to react as compared to alkenes.

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10
Q

What are the 3 types of electrophilic substitutions benzenes go through?

A

1) electrophilic substitution with chlorine or bromine (chlorination/bromination)
2) electrophilic substitution with concentrated nitric acid (nitration)
3) electrophilic substitution with halogenoalkanes (friedel-crafts alkylation)

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11
Q

State the reagents&conditions needed and observations during electrophilic substitution with chlorine or bromine on benzene.

A

Reagents&Conditions:
1) Cl2 gas/Br2 liquid, FeCl3/FeBr3/AlX3 (s) as lewid acid catalyst, warm
2) (OR) Cl2/Br2 (g), Fe (s)/Al (s), warm
Observations:
- Decolourisation of greenish-yellow Cl2 (g) / reddish brown Br2 (l)
- white fumes of HBr (g) or HCl (g)

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12
Q

Briefly describe the 3-step mechanism of electrophilic substitution with chlorine or bromine on benzene.

A

Using the example of bromine,

1) FeBr3(s) and Br2(l) reacts to form a strong electrophile Br+.
2) Delocalised pi electron cloud attacks the electrophile Br+. Br+ adds onto the benzene ring, forming a carbocation intermediate. The positive charge on this intermediate is delocalised over the other 5 carbon atoms. Since the delocalised pi system is disrupted, this step has a fairly high activation energy and is the rds.
3) [FeBr4]- from step 1 acts as a Bronsted base and deprotonates the carbonates the carbocation intermediate, regenerating FeBr3, forming bromobenzene and HBr (byproduct). Aromaticity is restored.

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13
Q

In electrophilic substitution of chlorine/bromine on benzene, why is FeX3 the lewis acid catalyst?

A

the Fe in FeX3 can accept a lone pair of electrons of halogen X2

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14
Q

Why must In electrophilic substitution of chlorine/bromine on benzene be anhydrous?

A

In the presence of water, FeX(s) / AlX(s) will accept lone pair of electrons from water instead, and hence can no longer accept lone pairs of electrons from halogen X2 to generate the strong electrophile X+.

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15
Q

State the 1 reagent&2 conditions needed and observations during electrophilic substitution with concentrated nitric acid on benzene.

A

Reagent: concentrated HNO3
Conditions: concentrated H2SO4 as Bronsted-Lowry acid catalyst, maintained at 55ºC
Observation: pale yellow oily liquid formed

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16
Q

Why is sulfuric acid used in the electrophilic substitution with concentrated nitric acid on benzene?

A

It is a stronger Bronsted-Lowry acid than nitric acid, hence sulfuric acid would protonate nitric acid, eventually generating strong electrophile nitronium ion NO2+.

17
Q

State the 1 reagent & 2 conditions needed and observations during electrophilic substitution with halogenoalkanes on benzene. (friedel-crafts alkylation)

A

Reagent: chloroalkane
Conditions: AlX3 (s) as lewis acid catalyst, warm
Observation: white fumes of HCl (g)

18
Q

What is methylbenzene?

A

It is a compound obtained when a methyl group (–Ch3) replaces one of the H atoms in benzene. It has the molecular formula C7H8.

19
Q

Briefly describe the physical properties of methylbenzene.

A

it is a colourless liquid which is insoluble in water. It is relatively less toxic than benzene.

20
Q

What are the 3 types of reactions that the benzene ring on methylbenzene can undergo?

A

electrophilic substitution of:

1) chlorine/bromine
2) nitration
3) friedel-crafts alkylation

21
Q

What are the 2 types of reactions that the side chain on methylbenzene can undergo?

A

side chain reactions:

1) free-radical substitution
2) side-chain oxidation

22
Q

State the reagents&conditions needed and observations during electrophilic substitution with chlorine or bromine on methylbenzene.

A

Reagents & Conditions: Cl2(g)/Br2(l), FeX3 (s) as lewis acid catalyst, room temperature and absence of UV
Observation: decolourisation of greenish-yellow Cl2/reddish-brown Br2, white fumes of HX (g)

23
Q

State the 1 reagent & 2 conditions needed and observations during electrophilic substitution with concentrated nitric acid on methylbenzene.

A

Reagent: concentrated HNO3
Conditions: Concentrated H2SO4 as Bronsted-Lowry acid catalyst, maintained at 30ºC (milder conditions since –CH3 is activating)
Observation: yellow oily liquid formed

24
Q

State the 1 reagent & 2 conditions needed and observations during friedel-crafts alkylation of methylbenzene.

A

reagent: chloroalkane
conditions: AlCl3 (l) as lewis acid catalyst, room temperature (activating –CH3 requires milder conditions)
observations: white fumes of HCl (g)

25
Q

What are activating groups?

A

electron-donating substituents increase the electron density of the benzene ring, thereby increasing the reactivity of the benzene ring.

26
Q

What are deactivating groups?

A

electron-withdrawing substituents decrease the electron density of the benzene ring, thereby decreasing the reactivity of the benzene ring.

27
Q

How does the inductive effect work on arene substituents?

A

Inductive is present when there is a difference in electronegativity between 2 covalently bonded atoms. Substituents can inductively donate/withdraw electron density into/from the benzene ring through the sigma bond.

28
Q

How does the resonance effect work on arene substituents? (2)

A

Resonance effect is present when there is overlapping p orbitals (in this case between carbon of benzene and substituent)

1) substituents with general structure X, where X has at least 1 lone pair residing in the p orbital, can donate a lone pair of electrons into benzene ring via resonance through the pi bond.
2) substituents with general structure –Y=Z, where Z is more electronegative than Y, can withdraw electrons from the benzene ring via resonance through the pi bond.

29
Q

What happens when there are two substituents on the benzene ring? (3 scenarios)

A

1) if the directing effects of both substituents direct to the same position on the ring, then it is where electrophilic substitution will predominantly occur.
2) If both substituents are activating, and direct to different positions, the directing effect of the more activating substituent will dominate.
3) if the substituents consists of a strongly activating group and a deactivating group, the directing effect of the strongly activating substituent will dominate
4) if the substituents consists of other combinations/similar activating effects/similar deactivating effects, and each group directs towards different positions, it will result in a mixture of products of poor yield. (not ideal)

30
Q

State the reagents & conditions needed and observations during side-chain halogenisation on methylbenzene (FRS).

A

Reagents and conditions: X2, UV light or heat

Observations: reddish brown Br2/greenish-yellow chlorine decolourises slowly

31
Q

State the reagents & conditions needed and observations during side-chain oxidation of methylbenzene.

A

Reagents and conditions: aqueous KMnO4, dilute H2SO4/NaOH, heat
Observations: purple KMnO4 decolourises. For the reaction with H2SO4, white precipitate of benzoic acid is formed. For the reaction with NaOH, brown precipitate of manganese dioxide is formed.

32
Q

What is one exception of side-chain oxidation of methylbenzene?

A

when there are 3 alkyl substituents attached to the C atom beside the benzene ring, the alkylbenzene will NOT undergo side-chain oxidation.

33
Q

How do we differentiate between alkenes and arenes? Describe the procedure and observations. (3)

A

1) add bromine in tetrachloromethane DROPWISE WITH SHAKING to 1cm3 of each compound in separate test tubes. if it is an arene, the reddish brown Br2 in CCl4 will decolourise. if it is an alkene, it will not decolourise.
2) add aqueous bromine DROPWISE WITH SHAKING to 1cm3 of each compound in separate test tubes. if it is an arene, yellow orange aq bromine will not decolourise, while it will decolourise if it is an alkene.

34
Q

How do we differentiate between certain alkenes and certain alkylbenzenes?

A

Add 5 drops of KMnO4 to 1cm3 of dilute H2SO4 in a test tube. To 1cm3 of each compound in separate test tubes, add 2-3 drops of the mixture DROPWISE WITH SHAKING. Warm the test tubes in a water bath for a few minutes.
Alkenes with terminal C=C bonds will undergo oxidative cleavage, producing CO2 effervescence and decolourising purple KMnO4 without producing white PPT. Alkylbenzenes will undergo side-chain oxidation, decolourising purple KMnO4 and producing white ppt of benzoic acid, without producing effervescence.

35
Q

Explain why aromatic compounds tend to undergo substitution reactions instead of addition reactions.

A

Electrophilic addition destroys the delocalisation in the pi electron cloud/disrupts aromaticity which requires a significant amount of energy, whereas electrophilic substitution preserves aromaticity.