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Chapter 12 Radicals Reactions of Alkanes

Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice. Chapter 12 Radicals Reactions of Alkanes. Petroleum is a complex mixture of alkanes and cycloalkanes that can be separated by distillation:. Alkanes are very unreactive compounds because.

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Chapter 12 Radicals Reactions of Alkanes

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  1. Organic Chemistry 6th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice • Chapter 12 • Radicals • Reactions of Alkanes

  2. Petroleum is a complex mixture of alkanes and cycloalkanes that can be separated by distillation:

  3. Alkanes are very unreactive compounds because they have only strong s bonds and atoms with no partial charges However, alkanes do react with Cl2 and Br2:

  4. Consider the relative stabilities of alkyl radicals: Alkyl groups stabilize carbocations about 5–10 times better than they stabilize radicals: Radicals: Resonance > Hyperconjugation Carbocations: Hyperconjugation > Resonance

  5. Why does hyperconjugation stabilize carbocations more than radicals? Radical: One of the electrons is in the antibonding orbital Carbocation: Both electrons are in the bonding orbital

  6. The Distribution of Products Depends on Probability and Reactivity Probability is based on relative number of primary and secondary protons, 6:4 However, secondary hydrogens are more reactive than primary hydrogens Therefore, probability and reactivity both contribute to product distribution

  7. To determine the the product distribution, consider both probability and reactivity: • Probability: the number of hydrogens that can be abstracted that will lead to the formation of the particular product • Reactivity: the relative rate at which a particular hydrogen is abstracted

  8. An example of calculating the distribution of radical chlorination products:

  9. The Reactivity–Selectivity Principle Radical bromination is more selective than radical chlorination:

  10. Reactivity–Selectivity Principle • Monochlorination reactions: • Monobromination reactions:

  11. Radical stability important Radical stability not important Why is the bromine radical more selective than the chlorine radical? • Hammond postulate: • Endothermic, a product-like (radical) transition state • Exothermic, a reactant-like (alkane) transition state Therefore, the bromine atom more readily distinguishes 3º, 2º, and 1º hydrogens

  12. The more reactive a species is, the less selective it will be:

  13. What about fluorination and iodination? Alkanes undergo chlorination and bromination, but not iodination Fluorination is too violent a reaction to be useful:

  14. Addition of Radicals to an Alkene Peroxide is used to generate Br radical in trace quantities

  15. An alkyl peroxide is a radical initiator The electrophile adds to the sp2 carbon that is bonded to the greater number of hydrogens

  16. Radicals do not rearrange as readily as carbocations:

  17. Why is the peroxide effect observed only for the addition of HBr to alkene? Because both of the propagation steps in the HBr addition reaction are exothermic.

  18. Stereochemistry of Radical Substitution Reactions

  19. Stereochemistry of Radical Addition Reactions

  20. Why are both enantiomers formed? Consider the first propagation step:

  21. Radical Substitution of Benzylic and Allylic Hydrogens The more stable radicals form faster:

  22. The percentage of substitution at the benzylic or allylic carbon is greater for bromination. Note the reactivity–selectivity principle:

  23. Because of the presence of an alkene functional group, N-bromosuccinimide is used as a brominating agent for allylic compounds: No Br2 addition to the alkene

  24. Mechanism of NBS Bromination Azobisisobutylnitrile radical initiator

  25. Advantage: The low concentrations of Br2 and HBr present during NBS bromations result in no alkene addition reactions:

  26. Designing a Multistep Synthesis Example 1 Synthesis:

  27. Example 2 Racemic Synthesis: Racemic

  28. Example 3 Retosynthetic analysis: Synthesis:

  29. Radical Reactions in Biological Systems Cytochrome-mediated hydroxylation of an alkane: Conversion of nicotine to a polar metabolite:

  30. The Heme Cofactor of a Cytochrome The FeII is converted to the reactive FeV oxide

  31. Cytochrome oxidation Antihistamine Metabolism: Allegra Site of oxidation depends on accessibility rather than radical stability

  32. Reactive Oxygen Species: Other Reactions of Radicals Reaction of ethers to form highly explosive peroxides: Caution: Ethers may have dangerous levels of peroxides!

  33. Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Are Common in Biological Systems Oxidation of an unsaturated fat: Terminating the radical chain reaction with a phenolic compound: Radical is resonance stabilized and not propagated

  34. Radical Chain Terminators: Antioxidants Fat-soluble Water-soluble

  35. A radical that cannot propagate: • Resonance stabilized • Sterically hindered Commonly Used Antioxidant Preservatives BHT is used in packaging: Hydroquinone is used to preserve ethers:

  36. Stars show the resonance delocation of the radical Naturally Occurring Antioxidants Rutin is a bioflavonoid glycoside with antioxidant and anticancer properties: Bioflavonoids afford resonance-stabilized radicals: Found in citrus fruit and berries

  37. Green Tea Antioxidants Note the abundance of phenolic hydroxyls:

  38. Green Tea Antioxidants Formed from catechins during tea fermentation

  39. Radicals and Stratospheric Ozone • Ozone is a major constituent of smog • Ozone shields Earth from harmful radiation

  40. Chlorofluorocarbons remain very stable in the atmosphere until they reach the stratosphere: The chlorine radicals are ozone-removing agents:

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