CHAPTER1
HALOALKANES
FJ / Chemistry Unit, KMPk / Mac 2006
15.1 : Introduction
Haloalkanes or alkyl halides
- compounds that contains halogen atom
bonded to an sp3 hybridized carbon atom.
General formula :
or
or
R-X
CnH2n+1X (acyclic)
CnH2n-1X (cyclic)
where X : halogen atom
(F, Cl, Br or I)
2
15.1.1 : Classification of
Haloalkanes
Haloalkanes are classified according
to
the nature of carbon atom bonded to the
halogen.
General Formula
Classification
CH 3X
methyl halide
- halogen is bonded
to methyl group
R CH 2 X
Primary (10) halide
- halogen is bonded
to 10 carbon atom
R
R CH X
Secondary (20) halide
- halogen is bonded
to 20 carbon atom 3
General Formula
Classification
Tertiary (30) halide
- halogen is bonded to 30
carbon atom
R C X
R
X
CH 2X
Aryl halide
- halogen is bonded to
aromatic ring
** Not a aryl halide
4
Example :
Classify the following haloalkanes :
No
.
Haloalkanes
CH 3CH 2Br
i.
ii.
Classification
10
CH 3CH(Cl)CH 3
20
(CH 3)3C(Br)
iii.
iv.
H 3C
Cl
30
30
15.1.2 : IUPAC Nomenclature
Haloalkanes are named as alkanes with
halogen as substituents.
Locate and number the parent chain from
the direction that gives the substituent
encountered first the lower number.
Show
halogen substituents by the
prefixes flouro-, chloro-, bromo- and
iodo-, and list them in alphabetical order
along with other substituents.
6
Example :
i.
CH 3CHCH 2CH 3
Br
2bromobutan
e
ii.
Cl
BrCH 2CH 2CHCHCH 2CH 3
CH 3
1-bromo-3-chloro-4methylhexane
Example :
iii.
CH 2CH 2F
CH 3CH 2CH 2CHCH 2CH 2CH 3
4-(2flouroethyl)heptane
iv.
H 3C
CH 3
Cl
2-chloro-1,1dimethylcyclopentane
Example :
v.
Br
4bromocyclohexe
ne
vi.
CH 2Cl
(chloromethyl)ben
zene
vii.
CH 3
Cl
2chlorotoluen
15.1.3 : Structure of
Haloalkane
The carbon halogen bond in haloalkene is polar
because halogens is more electronegative than
carbon.
+ C X
electrophi
lic site
The polar C X bond causes the carbon bearing
the halogen is susceptible to nucleophilic attack.
Haloalkanes are reactive and undergo nucleophilic
substitution and elimination reaction.
10
15.2 : Chemical
Properties
15.2.1 : Nucleophilic
Reaction
Substitution
Haloalkanes
undergo
nucleophilic
substitution reactions in which the halogen
atom is replaced by a nucleophile.
In this reaction, the nucleophile attacks
the partially positive charge (+) carbon
atom bonded to the halogen (-).
General
reaction_:
_
R X
Nu:
R _ Nu
_
X:
11
(a) :
Hydrolysis of Haloalkane with
Aqueous Solution of NaOH (H2O/NaOH)
Alkaline
hydrolysis is carried out by
boiling R-X with NaOH(aq) to form alcohol.
R_ X + NaOH
H 2O
R_ OH + NaX
Example :
CH 3
H 2O
_
_
CH 3 C Br + NaOH
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3_ C _OH + NaBr
CH 3
12
(b) :
Reaction of Haloalkane with
Potassium Cyanide (KCN)
When R-X is refluxed with KCN in alcohol,
the halogen atom is substituted by the
CN- to produce a nitrile compound.
_
_
R X + CN
alcohol
reflux
_
_
R CN + X
Example :
CH 3CH 2Br + KCN
alcohol
reflux
CH 3CH 2CN + KBr
13
(c) :Reaction of Haloalkane with Ammonia
(NH3)
When
R-X
is
heated
with
excess
concentrated NH3, the halogen atom is
replaced by the amino group, NH2-.
R_ X
NH3
_
+
RNH3 X
NH3
_
_
+
R NH2 +NH4 X
(amin
e)
Example :
CH 3CH 2Cl + excess NH 3
_
+
CH 3CH 2NH 2 + NH 4 Cl
14
15.2.2
: Mechanisms of Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction
They are 2 important mechanisms for the
substitution reaction:
(A).
Unimolecular
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction (SN1)
(B).
Bimolecular
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction (SN2)
15
(A)
: Unimolecular
Nucleophilic
Substitution
Reaction (SN1)
The term unimolecular means there is only one
molecule involved in the transition state of the
rate-limiting step.
S N1
reactions are governed mainly
relative stabilities of carbocations.
by
the
Relative reactivities of haloalkanes in an S N1
reaction :
R-X
1o
<
R-X <
2o
R-X
3o
increasing reactivity
16
The rate of SN1 reaction does not depend
on the concentration of nucleophile.
The
rate
depends
concentration of the
halide.
only
on
the
substrate, alkyl
rate = k [R3C-X]
* SN1 is a first order reaction
17
The mechanism of SN1 reaction involves 2
steps.
Step 1 : Formation of a carbocation (rate
determining
step)
R
R_ C _ X
slow
R
3o alkyl halide
R
_
_
R C+ + X
R
carbocation
halide ion
Step 2 : Nucleophilic attack on the carbocation
R
_
_
R C + + Nu:
R
fast
R
R_ C _ Nu
R
18
Example 1 :
Reaction of
H2O.
2-bromo-2-methylpropane with
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ Br + H 2O
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ OH + HBr
CH 3
SN1 mechanism :
Step 1 : Formation of a carbocation
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ Br
CH 3
slow
CH 3
_
_
CH 3 C +
+ Br
CH 3
19
Step
2 : Nucleophilic
carbocation
attack
CH 3
fast
_
+
CH 3 C
+ H 2O
CH 3
on
the
CH 3
H
_
_
CH 3 C O
+ H
CH 3
Loss of proton, H+ to solvent
CH 3
H
_
_
CH 3 C O
+ H
CH 3
+ H 2O
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ OH + H 3O+
CH 3
20
Example 2 :
Write the
reaction.
mechanism
CH 3
CH 3_ C _CH 2Br + NaOH(aq)
CH 3
for
the
following
CH 3
CH 3_ C _CH 2CH 3 + NaBr
OH
SN1 Mechanism :
Step 1 : Formation of carbocation
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ CH 2_ Br
CH 3
slow
CH 3
_
_
_
CH 3 C CH 2 + Br
+
CH 3
21
Rearrangement :
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ CH 2
+
CH 3
1,2-methyl shift
Step 2 : Nucleophilic
carbocation
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ CH2
+
CH 3
+ OH
fast
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ CH 2
+
CH 3
attack
on
the
CH 3
CH 3_ C _ CH 2CH 3
OH
22
Exercise 1 : (Feb 2003)
Write a reasonable structures of products
formed when 1-iodobutane reacts with
i.
ii.
iii.
KCN
NaOH/H2O
excess NH3
Write the mechanism for the reaction in
(ii).
23
Exercise 2 : (Mac 2002)
The structure of compound A is as follows:
CH3
CH3 C Br
CH3
i. Give IUPAC name for A
ii.Compound A react with OH- forming an alcohol.
Write the mechanism for the formation of this
alcohol and name the reaction.
24
(B)
: Bimolecular
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction (SN2)
The term bimolecular means that the
transition state of the rate limiting step
involves the collision of two molecules.
SN2 reactions are governed mainly by
steric factors (steric effect).
Steric effect
- is an effect on relative rates caused
by the space-filling properties of those
parts of a
molecule attached at or
near to the reacting
site.
25
The reactivity on SN2 reaction depends on the size of
atoms or groups attached to a C X.
The presence of bulky alkyl groups will prevent the
nucleophilic attack and slow the reaction rate.
Relative
reactivities
of
R-X
R-X
haloalkanes
in
an
S N2
reaction :
2o
<
<
CH3-X
1o
increasing reactivity
26
The
rate of reaction depends on the
concentration of the haloalkane and the
concentration of nucleophile.
rate = k [R-X] [Nu:-]
* SN2 is a second order reaction.
The mechanism of SN2 occurs in a single
step.
General Mechanism :
R
Nu:-
C X
H
slow
Nu C X
H H
transition
fast Nu C
+ X27
In SN2 reaction, the nucleophile attacks from the
back side of the electrophilic carbon, that is, from
the side directly opposite bonded to the halogen.
The
transition state involves partial bonding
between the attacking nucleophile and the
haloalkane.
Back-side attack causes the product formed has
inverse
configuration
configuration.
from
the
original
* turns the tetrahedron of the carbon atom
inside out, like umbrella caught by the wind.
28
Example 3 :
Reaction of ethyl bromide with aqueous
sodium hydroxide.
CH 3CH 2Br + NaOH (aq)
CH 3CH 2OH + NaBr
SN2 Mechanism :
:OH-
CH3
H
C Br
H
slow
CH3
OH C Br
H H
transition
state
fast
CH3
OH C
H
+ Br-
29
Comparison of SN1 and SN2 Reactions
SN 1
A two-step
mechanism
SN 2
A one-step mechanism
A unimolecular
A bimolecular
rate-determining step rate-determining step
Second order :
rate = k [RX] [Nu]
First order :
rate = k [RX]
Strong nucleophile
Weak nucleophile
Carbocation
rearrangement
No carbocation
rearrangement
Reactivity order :
3o > 2o > 1o
Reactivity order :
o
methyl > 1o > 230
15.2.3 : Elimination Reaction
(dehydrohalogenation of
haloalkanes)
Halogen can be removed from one carbon
of a haloalkane and hydrogen from an
adjacent carbon to form a carbon-carbon
double bond in the presence of a strong
base.
General reaction :
H
_ C _ C _ + :B_
X
_
C C
haloalka
ne
alken
e
base
+ X
31
Example :
Br
i.
CH 3CHCHCH 3
CH 3CH 2ONa
CH 3CH 2OH
CH 3C CHCH 3
CH 3
CH 3
major
+
CH 3CHC CH 2
CH 3
mino
r
ii.
Br
CH 3
CH 3CH 2ONa
CH 3CH 2OH
CH 3
CH 2
+
major
mino
32
15.2.4 : Synthesis of
Organomagnesium
Compound ( Grignard Reagent )
Prepared by the reaction of haloalkanes
with magnesium metal in anhydrous ether
as a solvent.
R-X + Mg ether R-MgX
Grignard Reagent
( alkylmagnesium
halide)
Example :
CH 3CH 2CH 2Br + Mg ether CH 3CH 2CH 2MgBr
i.
ii.
Cl + Mg
ether
MgCl
33
15.2.4.1 :
Synthesis of Alkanes,
Alcohols and
Carboxylic Acids
from Grignard
Reagents.
The
Grignard reagents undergo many
reactions that make them useful as a
starting materials in the synthesis of
other organic compounds.
(i).
Synthesis of alkane
The Grignard reagent is hydrolyzed to
an alkane when warmed with H2O.
H+
RMgX + H 2O
R-H + Mg(OH)X
34
Example :
i.
+
H
CH 3CH 2MgBr + H 2O
CH 3CH 3 + Mg(OH)Br
ii.
CH 3CH-MgBr + H 2O
H+
CH 3CH 2CH 3 + Mg(OH)Br
CH 3
iii.
CH 2MgCl
H 2O/H +
CH 3
+ Mg(OH)Cl
35
(ii).
Synthesis of 1o alcohol
Methanal reacts with the Grignard
reagent,
followed by the hydrolysis
produces primary alcohol.
H
O
R-MgX + H-C-H
R-C-OMgX
H
H 2O,H +
H
R-C-OH + Mg(OH)X
H
36
Example :
i.
CH 3MgBr + H-C-H
H 3O+
H
CH 3-C-OH + Mg(OH)Br
H
ii.
MgBr
O
+ H-C-H
H 3O+
CH 2OH
+ Mg(OH)Br
37
(iii). Synthesis of 2o alcohol
Grignard
reagent
reacts
with
aldehydes to produce secondary alcohol.
R'
O
R-MgX + H-C-R'
R-C-OMgX
H
H 2O,H +
R'
R-C-OH + Mg(OH)X
H
38
Example :
i.
CH 3CH 2MgBr + CH 3CH 2-C-H
H 2O/H +
H
CH 3CH 2-C-CH 2CH 3 + Mg(OH)Br
ii.
MgCl
OH
O
+ CH 3-C-H
CH 3
H 2O/H +
C-OH
+ Mg(OH)Cl
H
39
(iv). Synthesis of 3o alcohol
Grignard reagent reacts with ketons
to produce the tertiary alcohol.
R'
O
R-MgX + R'-C-R"
R-C-OMgX
R"
H 2O,H +
R'
R-C-OH + Mg(OH)X
R"
40
Example :
i.
O
CH 3CH 2MgBr + CH 3-C-CH 3
H 2O/H +
CH 3
ii.
CH 3CH 2-C-CH 3 + Mg(OH)Br
MgCl
OH
O
+ CH 3-C-CH 3
CH 3
H 3O+
C-OH
CH 3
+ Mg(OH)Cl
41
(v).
Synthesis of carboxylic acid
Grignard reagent reacts with carbon
dioxide (CO2) followed by hydrolysis to
form carboxylic
acid.
O
RMgX + O C O
O
R-C-O-MgX + H 2O
H+
R-C-O-MgX
O
R-C-OH + Mg(OH)X
42
Example :
O
CH 3CH 2MgI + CO2
O
CH 3CH 2-C-O-MgI + H 2O
CH 3CH 2-C-O-MgI
H+
O
CH 3CH 2COH + Mg(OH)I
43
15.2.5 : Wurtz Reaction
Reaction of haloalkane (RX) with an alkali
metal (usually Na) to synthesise longer alkane.
i. To prepare an even number of carbon
atoms alkane
2RX + 2Na dry
RR + 2NaX
ether
Example:
2CH3CH2Br + 2Na
CH3CH2CH2CH3 + 2NaBr
44
ii.To prepare a odd number of carbon atoms
RX + RX + 6Na
alkane
RR + RR + RR
+
6NaX
Example:
CH3CH2Br + CH3Br + 6Na
CH3CH2CH2CH3
+ CH3CH2CH3
+ CH3CH3 + 6NaBr
45
15.2.6 : Importance of Haloalkanes
as Inert
Substance
Haloalkanes
Uses
CCl4
solvent for dry
cleaning, spot
removing
(carbon tetrachloride)
CHCl3
(chloroform)
CF2Cl2 , Freon-12
(dichlorodifluoromethane)
CFC
(chloroflourocarbons)
DDT
solvent for
cleaning and
degreasing work
propellants in
aerosol sprays
refrigerant gas
insecticide
46