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Chapter 2

The document discusses various electronic and inductive effects including steric effects, inductive effects, conjugation effects, hyperconjugation effects, and how these effects influence acidity and basicity. It provides examples of how substituents can influence polarization and acidity through induction, conjugation, and hyperconjugation.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views

Chapter 2

The document discusses various electronic and inductive effects including steric effects, inductive effects, conjugation effects, hyperconjugation effects, and how these effects influence acidity and basicity. It provides examples of how substituents can influence polarization and acidity through induction, conjugation, and hyperconjugation.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 2: ELECTRONIC & INDUCTIVE EFFECTS (I)

STERIC EFFECTS C-C bond in butane:


almost completely nonpolar
Effects

Steric Electronic C-C bond in 1-


fluorobutane: polarized -

+
Inductive Hyperconjugation ''+
'+
'''+

Conjugation / Mesomeric
C1 is more positive than C2 as a result of electron-
2
attracting ability of F 3

The more electronegative


the X, the stronger the –I
effect

The more electropositive the Z, the stronger


the +I effect
4 5
Through a period in a periodic table

-I

Through a
group in a
periodic
table

Ka.105
CH3CH2CH2COOH 1.5
CH3CH2CH(Cl)COOH 139 Strong -I
-I CH3CH(Cl)CH2COOH 8.9
6 ClCH2CH2CH2COOH 3.0 weak -I 7

CONJUGATION / MESOMERIC O is more electronegative than C

EFFECTS (C / M) Electrons move through -bond network towards


C=O
Electron delocalization in a conjugated system:
The conjugated system is polarized
Alternating
single & C=O has negative conjugation / mesomeric effect
multiple (-C / -M) on the conjugated system
bonds

8 9
OH +C O H -C
C CH CH CH CHR
-C +C
-C +C
C O R
N
NH2 -C
-C +C +C

R CH CH CH CH O R
-C +C

10 11
-C +C

-C groups generally contain an electronegative atom (s)


Through a period in a periodic table
or / and a -bond (s):
+C

CHO, C(O)R, COOH, COOR, NO2, CN, aromatics, alkenes Through a


group in a
+C groups generally contain a lone pair of electrons periodic
or a -bond (s): table

Cl, Br, OH, OR, SH, SR, NH2, NHR, NR2, aromatics, alkenes
+C
Aromatics or alkenes can be both +C and-C 12 13
INDUCTIVE vs CONJUGATION INDUCTIVE vs CONJUGATION
EFFECTS EFFECTS
O
H CH CH CH CH CH CH C • C effects are generally stronger than I
H
effects
O • C effects can be effective over much
H CH CH CH CH C longer distances than I effects –
H provided that conjugation is present
O • I effects are determined by distance, C
Mobility of hydrogen H CH CH C effects are determined by relative
atoms: almost the same
H positions
14 15
-C

HYPERCONJUGATION EFFECTS (H) •H effect of -CH3 is stronger than H effect of -CH2-


•H effect is generally stronger than I effect
H
H C CH HCl
CH CH2 CH3
δ+ δ−
H

CH3 CH CH2 CH2 CH3


Electron density from C -H flows into the vacant p orbital
(in carbocation / C=C / C C) because orbitals can partially
Cl
overlap
Electron-donating ability of -CH3 is stronger
Hyperconjugation effects (H) 16 than that of -CH2CH3 17
STERIC EFFECTS
• A steric effect is an effect on relative rates caused
by space-filling properties of those parts of a
molecule attached at / near the reacting site

• Steric hindrance: the spatial arrangement of the


atoms / groups at / near the reacting site hinders /
retards a reaction

• Generally, very large & bulky groups can hinder Steric hindrance
the formation of the required transition state
18 19

Steric
hindrance ACIDITY & BASICITY

20 21
Electron-
donating
groups

Electron-
withdrawing
groups

22 23

If –C groups are introduced at ortho- & para


position on phenol rings:
+ The anion (-O-) can be further stabilized by
Electron- delocalization through the conjugated system as
donating
groups
the negative charge can be spread onto the -C
groups
+ The O-H bond is more polarized as electron
density on –OH can be spread onto the -C groups
Electron-
withdrawing
groups
Acidity of phenols is generally
increased
24 25
OH OH OH
If –I groups are introduced on phenol rings, the
NO2
effect will depend on the distance: > >
+ The closer the –I group is to the negative NO2
charge (-O-), the greater the stabilizing effect is NO2
pKa = 7.15 7.23 8.4
+ The closer the –I group is to the –OH, the O-H
bond is more polarized OH OH OH
CH3
> >
Acidity of phenols is generally CH3
increased CH3
pKa = 10.08 10.14 10.28
Note: there might be ortho-effects
26 27

OH Benzoic acid derivatives Position on benzene ring


OH OH
OCH3 pKa Ortho- Meta- Para-
> >
CH3C6H4COOH 3.91 4.27 4.36
OCH3 NH2C6H4COOH 4.97 4.78 4.92
OCH3
pKa = 9.65 9.98 FC6H4COOH 3.27 3.87 4.14
10.21
OH ClC6H4COOH 2.92 3.82 3.98
OH OH
BrC6H4COOH 2.85 3.81 3.97
Cl
> > IC6H4COOH 2.86 3.85 4.02
Cl HOC6H4COOH 2.97 4.06 4.48
Cl
CH3OC6H4COOH 4.09 4.09 4.47
pKa = 8.48 9.02 9.38
NCC6H4COOH 3.14 3.84 3.55
28
NO2C6H4COOH 2.16 3.47 3.41 29
-I is decreased over
long distance
+C dominates -I dominates

CH3CH2CH CHCOOH < CH2 CHCH2CH2COOH < CH3CH CHCH2COOH

pKa = 4.83 pKa = 4.68 pKa = 4.48

+C and -I but +C and -I but


-I dominates -I dominates

HC C COOH H3C C C COOH

pKa = 1.84 pKa = 2.60 30 31

Basicity X pKa of ammonium cation


of o- m- p-
XC6H4NH2 CH3 4.39 4.69 5.12
CH3O 4.49 4.20 5.29
C2H5O 4.47 4.17 5.25
C6H5 3.78 4.18 4.27
F 3.20 3.59 4.65
Cl 2.61 3.34 3.98
Br 2.60 3.51 3.91
I 2.60 3,61 3,78
CH3OCO 2,23 3.64 2.38
CF3 --- 3.50 2.60
CN --- 2.76 1.74
NO2 -0.29 2,50 1,02 32 33
Allylic & benzylic carbocations
STABILITY OF CARBOCATIONS

+H & +I
+C +C

Allylic & benzylic carbocations are generally stable


due to the electron delocalization (+C effects)
34 35

Not all allylic & benzylic carbocations have the


same stability

36 37
Relative stability of carbocations STABILITY OF RADICALS

38 39

STABILITY OF CARBANIONS

40

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