Halogenation is an example of electrophillic aromatic substitution. In electrophilic aromatic substitutions, a benzene is attacked by an electrophile which results in substition of hydrogens. However, halogens are not electrophillic enough to break the aromaticity of benzenes, which require a catalyst to activate.
Preliminary step: Formation of the strongly electrophilic bromine cation
The π-electrons of the benzene ring are polarized by the electrophile, and two electrons are diverted to form a a-bond to the bromine atom. The positive charge is thereby relocated on the six-carbon ring, where it is conjugated with the remaining double bonds. The resulting intermediate is a benzenonium cation. Since the aromatic character of benzene is lost, the activation energy (ΔE1t) for this reaction is large. Note that the charge alternates so it is greatest ortho and pars to the location of the bromine attack.
Step 1: The electrophile forms a sigma-bond to the benzene ring, generating a positively charged benzenonium intermediate
In the second step of the bromination reaction, a base abstracts the hydrogen proton bonded to the only sp3 hybridizied carbon atom in the ring. Any base will serve for this purpose, but the most likely candidate in this case if bromine ion or it complex with ferric bromide (FeBr4Θ. The remaining electron pair immediately bonds to one of the adjacent positively charged carbons to reform the aromatic ring, which now bears a bromine substituent. She the proton transfer gives a very stable product, its activation energy (ΔE2t) is small and the reaction is fast.
Step 2: A proton is removed from this intermediate, yielding a substituted benzene ring
This mechanism for electrophilic aromatic substitution should be considered in context with other mechanisms involving carbocation intermediates. These include SN1 and E1 reactions of alkyl halides, and Brønsted acid addition reactions of alkenes.
To summarize, when carbocation intermediates are formed one can expect them to react further by one or more of the following modes:
SN1 and E1 reactions are respective examples of the first two modes of reaction. The second step of alkene addition reactions proceeds by the first mode, and any of these three reactions may exhibit molecular rearrangement if an initial unstable carbocation is formed. The carbocation intermediate in electrophilic aromatic substitution (the arenium ion) is stabilized by charge delocalization (resonance) so it is not subject to rearrangement. In principle it could react by either mode 1 or 2, but the energetic advantage of reforming an aromatic ring leads to exclusive reaction by mode 2 (ie. proton loss).
Example 1: What reagents would you need to get the given product?
Ans: Cl2 and AlCl3 or Cl2 and FeCl3
Example 2: Draw the mechanism of the reaction between Cl+ and a benzene.
Ans:
1. What is electrophilic aromatic substitution? |
2. What is bromination in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions? |
3. How does bromination occur in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions? |
4. What are the conditions required for bromination in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions? |
5. What are the applications of electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions? |
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