9.7 Substitution Reactions Teach Us Some Important Lessons
9.7 Substitution Reactions Teach Us Some Important Lessons
- The primary tells us that it needs to be an S 2 pathway.
- We have a strong nucleophile, which favors S 2.
- N doesn't give us much.
- The solvent isn't indicated.
- We think that the reaction follows an S 2 mechanism.
- To determine if the reaction will proceed via an S 2 or an S 1 pathway, look at all of the reagents and conditions.
- Almost the same products are produced by S 1 and S 2 reactions.
- The leaving group is attached to a stereo center.
- The outcome of S 1 and S 2 processes are different.
- When carbocation rearrangements are possible, this difference can be significant.
- S 2 reactions are not.
- Valuable lessons will be important as we move forward.
- All of the relevant information is contained within the mechanisms.
- Everything else can be justified based on the mechanisms.
- The factors that influence the reaction are summarized in the mechanism.
- Every reaction you will see from now on is true.
- You have practiced thinking this way.
- When analyzing a reaction, there are multiple factors at play.
- Sometimes the factors are pointing in the same direction while other times they are in conflict.
- When they are in a conflict, we need to weigh them against each other in order to determine the path of the reaction.
- A theme in organic chemistry is the concept of competing factors.
- If we analyze the first factor, we will find two effects: steric and electronic considerations.
- Because of steric considerations, the S 2 reactions need a primary or secondary sub N to attack a tertiary substrate.
- For S 1 reactions, electronic considerations were of paramount importance.
- The alkyl groups were needed to stable the carbocation.
- steric and electronic effects are major themes in organic chemistry.
- The rest of the course can be explained with either an electronic or steric argument.
- The better off you will be, the sooner you learn to consider these two effects.
- The electronic effects are more complex than the steric effects.
- The other three factors that we saw were electronic arguments.
- You will begin to see common threads in all of the reactions that you will encounter in this course once you get the hang of the electronic arguments.