1 / 44

Chapter 4 The Study of Chemical Reactions

Organic Chemistry , 5 th Edition L. G. Wade, Jr. Chapter 4 The Study of Chemical Reactions. Jo Blackburn Richland College, Dallas, TX Dallas County Community College District ã 2003, Prentice Hall. Tools for Study. To determine a reaction’s mechanism , look at: Equilibrium constant

alyssa
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 4 The Study of Chemical Reactions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organic Chemistry, 5th EditionL. G. Wade, Jr. Chapter 4The Study of Chemical Reactions Jo Blackburn Richland College, Dallas, TX Dallas County Community College District ã 2003,Prentice Hall

  2. Tools for Study • To determine a reaction’s mechanism, look at: • Equilibrium constant • Free energy change • Enthalpy • Entropy • Bond dissociation energy • Kinetics • Activation energy => Chapter 4

  3. Chlorination of Methane • Requires heat or light for initiation. • The most effective wavelength is blue, which is absorbed by chlorine gas. • Lots of product formed from absorption of only one photon of light (chain reaction).=> Chapter 4

  4. Free-Radical Chain Reaction • Initiation generates a reactive intermediate. • Propagation: the intermediate reacts with a stable molecule to produce another reactive intermediate (and a product molecule). • Termination: side reactions that destroy the reactive intermediate. => Chapter 4

  5. Initiation Step A chlorine molecule splits homolytically into chlorine atoms (free radicals) => Chapter 4

  6. Propagation Step (1) The chlorine atom collides with a methane molecule and abstracts (removes) a H, forming another free radical and one of the products (HCl). => Chapter 4

  7. Propagation Step (2) The methyl free radical collides with another chlorine molecule, producing the other product (methyl chloride) and regenerating the chlorine radical. => Chapter 4

  8. => Overall Reaction Chapter 4

  9. Termination Steps • Collision of any two free radicals • Combination of free radical with contaminant or collision with wall. Can you suggest others? => Chapter 4

  10. Equilibrium constant • Keq = [products] [reactants] • For chlorination Keq = 1.1 x 1019 • Large value indicates reaction “goes to completion.”=> Chapter 4

  11. Free Energy Change • DG = free energy of (products - reactants), amount of energy available to do work. • Negative values indicate spontaneity. • DGo = -RT(lnKeq)where R = 1.987 cal/K-moland T = temperature in kelvins • Since chlorination has a large Keq, the free energy change is large and negative. => Chapter 4

  12. Problem • Given that -X is -OH, the energy difference for the following reaction is -1.0 kcal/mol. • What percentage of cyclohexanol molecules will be in the equatorial conformer at equilibrium at 25°C? => Chapter 4

  13. Factors Determining G • Free energy change depends on • enthalpy • entropy • H = (enthalpy of products) - (enthalpy of reactants) • S = (entropy of products) - (entropy of reactants) • G = H - TS => Chapter 4

  14. Enthalpy • DHo = heat released or absorbed during a chemical reaction at standard conditions. • Exothermic, (-DH), heat is released. • Endothermic, (+DH), heat is absorbed. • Reactions favor products with lowest enthalpy (strongest bonds). => Chapter 4

  15. Entropy • DSo = change in randomness, disorder, freedom of movement. • Increasing heat, volume, or number of particles increases entropy. • Spontaneous reactions maximize disorder and minimize enthalpy. • In the equation DGo = DHo - TDSo the entropy value is often small. => Chapter 4

  16. Bond Dissociation Energy • Bond breaking requires energy (+BDE) • Bond formation releases energy (-BDE) • Table 4.2 gives BDE for homolytic cleavage of bonds in a gaseous molecule. We can use BDE to estimate H for a reaction.=> Chapter 4

  17. 104 103 58 84 104 84 => 103 58 Which is more likely? Estimate DH for each step using BDE. Chapter 4

  18. Kinetics • Answers question, “How fast?” • Rate is proportional to the concentration of reactants raised to a power. • Rate law is experimentally determined.=> Chapter 4

  19. Reaction Order • For A + B  C + D, rate = k[A]a[B]b • a is the order with respect to A • a + b is the overall order • Order is the number of molecules of that reactant which is present in the rate-determining step of the mechanism. • The value of k depends on temperature as given by Arrhenius: ln k = -Ea + lnART => Chapter 4

  20. => Activation Energy • Minimum energy required to reach the transition state. • At higher temperatures, more molecules have the required energy. Chapter 4

  21. => Reaction-Energy Diagrams • For a one-step reaction:reactants  transition state  products • A catalyst lowers the energy of the transition state. Chapter 4

  22. => Energy Diagram for a Two-Step Reaction • Reactants  transition state  intermediate • Intermediate  transition state  product Chapter 4

  23. Rate-Determining Step • Reaction intermediates are stable as long as they don’t collide with another molecule or atom, but they are very reactive. • Transition states are at energy maximums. • Intermediates are at energy minimums. • The reaction step with highest Ea will be the slowest, therefore rate-determining for the entire reaction. => Chapter 4

  24. Rate, Ea,and Temperature => Chapter 4

  25. Conclusions • With increasing Ea, rate decreases. • With increasing temperature, rate increases. • Fluorine reacts explosively. • Chlorine reacts at a moderate rate. • Bromine must be heated to react. • Iodine does not react (detectably). => Chapter 4

  26. Chlorination of Propane 1 C • There are six 1 H’s and two 2 H’s. We expect 3:1 product mix, or 75% 1-chloropropane and 25% 2-chloropropane. • Typical product mix: 40% 1-chloropropane and 60% 2-chloropropane. • Therefore, not all H’s are equally reactive. => 2 C Chapter 4

  27. Reactivity of Hydrogens • To compare hydrogen reactivity, find amount of product formed per hydrogen: 40% 1-chloropropane from 6 hydrogens and 60% 2-chloropropane from 2 hydrogens. • 40%  6 = 6.67% per primary H and60%  2 = 30% per secondary H • Secondary H’s are 30%  6.67% = 4.5 times more reactive toward chlorination than primary H’s. => Chapter 4

  28. Predict the Product Mix Given that secondary H’s are 4.5 times as reactive as primary H’s, predict the percentage of each monochlorinated product of n-butane + chlorine. => Chapter 4

  29. Free Radical Stabilities • Energy required to break a C-H bond decreases as substitution on the carbon increases. • Stability: 3 > 2 > 1 > methylDH(kcal) 91, 95, 98, 104 => Chapter 4

  30. Chlorination Energy Diagram Lower Ea, faster rate, so more stable intermediate is formed faster. => Chapter 4

  31. Bromination of Propane 1 C 2 C • There are six 1 H’s and two 2 H’s. We expect 3:1 product mix, or 75% 1-bromopropane and 25% 2-bromopropane. • Typical product mix: 3% 1-bromopropane and 97% 2-bromopropane !!! • Bromination is more selective than chlorination. => Chapter 4

  32. Reactivity of Hydrogens • To compare hydrogen reactivity, find amount of product formed per hydrogen: 3% 1-bromopropane from 6 hydrogens and 97% 2-bromopropane from 2 hydrogens. • 3%  6 = 0.5% per primary H and97%  2 = 48.5% per secondary H • Secondary H’s are 48.5%  0.5% = 97 times more reactive toward bromination than primary H’s. => Chapter 4

  33. Bromination Energy Diagram • Note larger difference in Ea • Why endothermic? => Chapter 4

  34. Bromination vs. Chlorination => Chapter 4

  35. Endothermic and Exothermic Diagrams => Chapter 4

  36. Hammond Postulate • Related species that are similar in energy are also similar in structure. The structure of a transition state resembles the structure of the closest stable species. • Transition state structure for endothermic reactions resemble the product. • Transition state structure for exothermic reactions resemble the reactants.=> Chapter 4

  37. Radical Inhibitors • Often added to food to retard spoilage. • Without an inhibitor, each initiation step will cause a chain reaction so that many molecules will react. • An inhibitor combines with the free radical to form a stable molecule. • Vitamin E and vitamin C are thought to protect living cells from free radicals. => Chapter 4

  38. Reactive Intermediates • Carbocations (or carbonium ions) • Free radicals • Carbanions • Carbene => Chapter 4

  39. Carbocation Structure • Carbon has 6 electrons, positive charge. • Carbon is sp2 hybridized with vacant p orbital. => Chapter 4

  40. Carbocation Stability • Stabilized by alkyl substituents 2 ways: • (1) Inductive effect: donation of electron density along the sigma bonds. • (2) Hyperconjugation: overlap of sigma bonding orbitals with empty p orbital.=> Chapter 4

  41. Free Radicals • Also electron-deficient • Stabilized by alkyl substituents • Order of stability:3 > 2 > 1 > methyl => Chapter 4

  42. Carbanions • Eight electrons on C:6 bonding + lone pair • Carbon has a negative charge. • Destabilized by alkyl substituents. • Methyl >1 > 2  > 3  => Chapter 4

  43. Carbenes • Carbon is neutral. • Vacant p orbital, so can be electrophilic. • Lone pair of electrons, so can be nucleophilic. => Chapter 4

  44. End of Chapter 4 Chapter 4

More Related