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A guide for A level students KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING

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1 A guide for A level students KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING
THE CHEMISTRY OF ARENES A guide for A level students KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING

2 KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING
ARENES INTRODUCTION This Powerpoint show is one of several produced to help students understand selected topics at AS and A2 level Chemistry. It is based on the requirements of the AQA and OCR specifications but is suitable for other examination boards. Individual students may use the material at home for revision purposes or it may be used for classroom teaching if an interactive white board is available. Accompanying notes on this, and the full range of AS and A2 topics, are available from the KNOCKHARDY SCIENCE WEBSITE at... Navigation is achieved by... either clicking on the grey arrows at the foot of each page or using the left and right arrow keys on the keyboard

3 ARENES CONTENTS Prior knowledge Structure of benzene
Thermodynamic stability Delocalisation Electrophilic substitution Nitration Chlorination Friedel-Crafts reactions Further substitution

4 Before you start it would be helpful to…
ARENES Before you start it would be helpful to… know the functional groups found in organic chemistry know the arrangement of bonds around carbon atoms recall and explain electrophilic addition reactions of alkenes

5 a formula of C6H6 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE a molecular mass of 78 and
Primary analysis revealed benzene had... an empirical formula of CH and a molecular mass of 78 and a formula of C6H6

6 a formula of C6H6 HAD ALTERNATING DOUBLE AND SINGLE BONDS
STRUCTURE OF BENZENE Primary analysis revealed benzene had... an empirical formula of CH and a molecular mass of 78 a formula of C6H6 Kekulé suggested that benzene was... PLANAR CYCLIC and HAD ALTERNATING DOUBLE AND SINGLE BONDS

7 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE HOWEVER... • it did not readily undergo electrophilic addition - no true C=C bond • only one 1,2 disubstituted product existed • all six C—C bond lengths were similar; C=C bonds are shorter than C-C • the ring was thermodynamically more stable than expected

8 To explain the above, it was suggested that the structure oscillated
STRUCTURE OF BENZENE HOWEVER... • it did not readily undergo electrophilic addition - no true C=C bond • only one 1,2 disubstituted product existed • all six C—C bond lengths were similar; C=C bonds are shorter than C-C • the ring was thermodynamically more stable than expected To explain the above, it was suggested that the structure oscillated between the two Kekulé forms but was represented by neither of them. It was a RESONANCE HYBRID.

9 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured.

10 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured. When cyclohexene (one C=C bond) is reduced to cyclohexane, 120kJ of energy is released per mole. C6H10(l) + H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) 2 3 - 120 kJ mol-1

11 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured. When cyclohexene (one C=C bond) is reduced to cyclohexane, 120kJ of energy is released per mole. C6H10(l) + H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Theoretically, if benzene contained three separate C=C bonds it would release 360kJ per mole when reduced to cyclohexane C6H6(l) + 3H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Theoretical - 360 kJ mol-1 (3 x -120) 2 3 - 120 kJ mol-1

12 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured. When cyclohexene (one C=C bond) is reduced to cyclohexane, 120kJ of energy is released per mole. C6H10(l) + H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Theoretically, if benzene contained three separate C=C bonds it would release 360kJ per mole when reduced to cyclohexane C6H6(l) + 3H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Actual benzene releases only 208kJ per mole when reduced, putting it lower down the energy scale Theoretical - 360 kJ mol-1 (3 x -120) 2 3 Experimental - 208 kJ mol-1 - 120 kJ mol-1

13 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY MORE STABLE THAN EXPECTED
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured. When cyclohexene (one C=C bond) is reduced to cyclohexane, 120kJ of energy is released per mole. C6H10(l) + H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Theoretically, if benzene contained three separate C=C bonds it would release 360kJ per mole when reduced to cyclohexane C6H6(l) + 3H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Actual benzene releases only 208kJ per mole when reduced, putting it lower down the energy scale It is 152kJ per mole more stable than expected. This value is known as the RESONANCE ENERGY. MORE STABLE THAN EXPECTED by 152 kJ mol-1 Theoretical - 360 kJ mol-1 (3 x -120) 2 3 Experimental - 208 kJ mol-1 - 120 kJ mol-1

14 THERMODYNAMIC EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY MORE STABLE THAN EXPECTED
When unsaturated hydrocarbons are reduced to the corresponding saturated compound, energy is released. The amount of heat liberated per mole (enthalpy of hydrogenation) can be measured. When cyclohexene (one C=C bond) is reduced to cyclohexane, 120kJ of energy is released per mole. C6H10(l) + H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Theoretically, if benzene contained three separate C=C bonds it would release 360kJ per mole when reduced to cyclohexane C6H6(l) + 3H2(g) ——> C6H12(l) Actual benzene releases only 208kJ per mole when reduced, putting it lower down the energy scale It is 152kJ per mole more stable than expected. This value is known as the RESONANCE ENERGY. MORE STABLE THAN EXPECTED by 152 kJ mol-1 Theoretical - 360 kJ mol-1 (3 x -120) 2 3 Experimental - 208 kJ mol-1 - 120 kJ mol-1

15 HYBRIDISATION OF ORBITALS - REVISION
1 1s 2 2s 2p The electronic configuration of a carbon atom is 1s22s22p2

16 HYBRIDISATION OF ORBITALS - REVISION
1 1s 2 2s 2p The electronic configuration of a carbon atom is 1s22s22p2 If you provide a bit of energy you can promote (lift) one of the s electrons into a p orbital. The configuration is now 1s22s12p3 1 1s 2 2s 2p The process is favourable because of the arrangement of electrons; four unpaired and with less repulsion is more stable

17 HYBRIDISATION OF ORBITALS - REVISION
The four orbitals (an s and three p’s) combine or HYBRIDISE to give four new orbitals. All four orbitals are equivalent. 2s22p2 2s12p3 4 x sp3 HYBRIDISE sp3 HYBRIDISATION

18 HYBRIDISATION OF ORBITALS - REVISION
Alternatively, only three orbitals (an s and two p’s) combine or HYBRIDISE to give three new orbitals. All three orbitals are equivalent. The remaining 2p orbital is unchanged. 2s22p2 2s12p3 3 x sp2 2p HYBRIDISE sp2 HYBRIDISATION

19 STRUCTURE OF ALKENES - REVISION
In ALKANES, the four sp3 orbitals repel each other into a tetrahedral arrangement. In ALKENES, the three sp2 orbitals repel each other into a planar arrangement and the 2p orbital lies at right angles to them

20 STRUCTURE OF ALKENES - REVISION
Covalent bonds are formed by overlap of orbitals. An sp2 orbital from each carbon overlaps to form a single C-C bond. The resulting bond is called a SIGMA (δ) bond.

21 STRUCTURE OF ALKENES - REVISION
The two 2p orbitals also overlap. This forms a second bond; it is known as a PI (π) bond. For maximum overlap and hence the strongest bond, the 2p orbitals are in line. This gives rise to the planar arrangement around C=C bonds.

22 ORBITAL OVERLAP IN ETHENE - REVIEW
two sp2 orbitals overlap to form a sigma bond between the two carbon atoms two 2p orbitals overlap to form a pi bond between the two carbon atoms s orbitals in hydrogen overlap with the sp2 orbitals in carbon to form C-H bonds the resulting shape is planar with bond angles of 120º

23 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE - DELOCALISATION
The theory suggested that instead of three localised (in one position) double bonds, the six p (p) electrons making up those bonds were delocalised (not in any one particular position) around the ring by overlapping the p orbitals. There would be no double bonds and all bond lengths would be equal. It also gave a planar structure. 6 single bonds

24 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE - DELOCALISATION
The theory suggested that instead of three localised (in one position) double bonds, the six p (p) electrons making up those bonds were delocalised (not in any one particular position) around the ring by overlapping the p orbitals. There would be no double bonds and all bond lengths would be equal. It also gave a planar structure. 6 single bonds one way to overlap adjacent p orbitals

25 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE - DELOCALISATION
The theory suggested that instead of three localised (in one position) double bonds, the six p (p) electrons making up those bonds were delocalised (not in any one particular position) around the ring by overlapping the p orbitals. There would be no double bonds and all bond lengths would be equal. It also gave a planar structure. 6 single bonds one way to overlap adjacent p orbitals another possibility

26 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE - DELOCALISATION
The theory suggested that instead of three localised (in one position) double bonds, the six p (p) electrons making up those bonds were delocalised (not in any one particular position) around the ring by overlapping the p orbitals. There would be no double bonds and all bond lengths would be equal. It also gave a planar structure. 6 single bonds one way to overlap adjacent p orbitals another possibility delocalised pi orbital system

27 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE - DELOCALISATION
The theory suggested that instead of three localised (in one position) double bonds, the six p (p) electrons making up those bonds were delocalised (not in any one particular position) around the ring by overlapping the p orbitals. There would be no double bonds and all bond lengths would be equal. It also gave a planar structure. 6 single bonds one way to overlap adjacent p orbitals another possibility delocalised pi orbital system This final structure was particularly stable and resisted attempts to break it down through normal electrophilic addition. However, substitution of any hydrogen atoms would not affect the delocalisation.

28 STRUCTURE OF BENZENE

29 The animation doesn’t work on early versions of Powerpoint
STRUCTURE OF BENZENE ANIMATION The animation doesn’t work on early versions of Powerpoint

30 WHY ELECTROPHILIC ATTACK?
Theory The high electron density of the ring makes it open to attack by electrophiles HOWEVER... Because the mechanism involves an initial disruption to the ring electrophiles will have to be more powerful than those which react with alkenes. A fully delocalised ring is stable so will resist attack.

31 WHY SUBSTITUTION? Theory Addition to the ring would upset the delocalised electron system Substitution of hydrogen atoms on the ring does not affect the delocalisation Overall there is ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION STABLE DELOCALISED SYSTEM ELECTRONS ARE NOT DELOCALISED AROUND THE WHOLE RING - LESS STABLE

32 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION
Theory The high electron density of the ring makes it open to attack by electrophiles Addition to the ring would upset the delocalised electron system Substitution of hydrogen atoms on the ring does not affect the delocalisation Because the mechanism involves an initial disruption to the ring, electrophiles must be more powerful than those which react with alkenes Overall there is ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION

33 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION
Theory The high electron density of the ring makes it open to attack by electrophiles Addition to the ring would upset the delocalised electron system Substitution of hydrogen atoms on the ring does not affect the delocalisation Because the mechanism involves an initial disruption to the ring, electrophiles must be more powerful than those which react with alkenes Overall there is ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION Mechanism • a pair of electrons leaves the delocalised system to form a bond to the electrophile • this disrupts the stable delocalised system and forms an unstable intermediate • to restore stability, the pair of electrons in the C-H bond moves back into the ring • overall there is substitution of hydrogen ... ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION

34 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS - NITRATION
Reagents conc. nitric acid and conc. sulphuric acid (catalyst) Conditions reflux at 55°C Equation C6H HNO3 ———> C6H5NO H2O nitrobenzene

35 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS - NITRATION
Reagents conc. nitric acid and conc. sulphuric acid (catalyst) Conditions reflux at 55°C Equation C6H HNO3 ———> C6H5NO H2O nitrobenzene Mechanism

36 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS - NITRATION
Reagents conc. nitric acid and conc. sulphuric acid (catalyst) Conditions reflux at 55°C Equation C6H HNO3 ———> C6H5NO H2O nitrobenzene Mechanism Electrophile NO2+ , nitronium ion or nitryl cation; it is generated in an acid-base reaction... 2H2SO HNO HSO4¯ H3O NO2+ acid base

37 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS - NITRATION
Reagents conc. nitric acid and conc. sulphuric acid (catalyst) Conditions reflux at 55°C Equation C6H HNO3 ———> C6H5NO H2O nitrobenzene Mechanism Electrophile NO2+ , nitronium ion or nitryl cation; it is generated in an acid-base reaction... 2H2SO HNO HSO4¯ H3O NO2+ acid base Use The nitration of benzene is the first step in an historically important chain of reactions. These lead to the formation of dyes, and explosives.

38 ELECTROPHILIC SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS - HALOGENATION
Reagents chlorine and a halogen carrier (catalyst) Conditions reflux in the presence of a halogen carrier (Fe, FeCl3, AlCl3) chlorine is non polar so is not a good electrophile the halogen carrier is required to polarise the halogen Equation C6H Cl2 ———> C6H5Cl HCl Mechanism Electrophile Cl+ it is generated as follows... Cl FeCl FeCl4¯ Cl+ a Lewis Acid

39 FRIEDEL-CRAFTS REACTIONS OF BENZENE - ALKYLATION
Overview Alkylation involves substituting an alkyl (methyl, ethyl) group Reagents a halogenoalkane (RX) and anhydrous aluminium chloride AlCl3 Conditions room temperature; dry inert solvent (ether) Electrophile a carbocation ion R+ (e.g. CH3+) Equation C6H C2H5Cl ———> C6H5C2H HCl

40 FRIEDEL-CRAFTS REACTIONS OF BENZENE - ALKYLATION
Overview Alkylation involves substituting an alkyl (methyl, ethyl) group Reagents a halogenoalkane (RX) and anhydrous aluminium chloride AlCl3 Conditions room temperature; dry inert solvent (ether) Electrophile a carbocation ion R+ (e.g. CH3+) Equation C6H C2H5Cl ———> C6H5C2H HCl Mechanism General A catalyst is used to increase the positive nature of the electrophile and make it better at attacking benzene rings. AlCl3 acts as a Lewis Acid and helps break the C—Cl bond.

41 FRIEDEL-CRAFTS REACTIONS OF BENZENE - ALKYLATION
Catalyst anhydrous aluminium chloride acts as the catalyst the Al in AlCl3 has only 6 electrons in its outer shell; a LEWIS ACID it increases the polarisation of the C-Cl bond in the haloalkane this makes the charge on C more positive and the following occurs RCl AlCl AlCl4¯ R+

42 FRIEDEL-CRAFTS REACTIONS - INDUSTRIAL ALKYLATION
Industrial Alkenes are used instead of haloalkanes but an acid must be present Phenylethane, C6H5C2H5 is made by this method Reagents ethene, anhydrous AlCl3 , conc. HCl Electrophile C2H5+ (an ethyl carbonium ion) Equation C6H C2H4 ———> C6H5C2H5 (ethyl benzene) Mechanism the HCl reacts with the alkene to generate a carbonium ion electrophilic substitution then takes place as the C2H5+ attacks the ring Use ethyl benzene is dehydrogenated to produce phenylethene (styrene); this is used to make poly(phenylethene) - also known as polystyrene

43 FRIEDEL-CRAFTS REACTIONS OF BENZENE - ACYLATION
Overview Acylation involves substituting an acyl (methanoyl, ethanoyl) group Reagents an acyl chloride (RCOX) and anhydrous aluminium chloride AlCl3 Conditions reflux 50°C; dry inert solvent (ether) Electrophile RC+= O ( e.g. CH3C+O ) Equation C6H CH3COCl ———> C6H5COCH HCl Mechanism Product A carbonyl compound (aldehyde or ketone)

44 FURTHER SUBSTITUTION OF ARENES
Theory It is possible to substitute more than one functional group. But, the functional group already on the ring affects... • how easy it can be done • where the next substituent goes Group ELECTRON DONATING ELECTRON WITHDRAWING Example(s) OH, CH NO2 Electron density of ring Increases Decreases Ease of substitution Easier Harder Position of substitution 2,4,and and 5

45 FURTHER SUBSTITUTION OF ARENES
Examples Substitution of nitrobenzene is... • more difficult than with benzene • produces a 1,3 disubstituted product Substitution of methylbenzene is… • easier than with benzene • produces a mixture of 1,2 and 1,4 isomeric products Some groups (OH) make substitution so much easier that multiple substitution takes place

46 RELATIVE POSITIONS ON A BENZENE RING ortho dichlorobenzene
STRUCTURAL ISOMERISM RELATIVE POSITIONS ON A BENZENE RING 1,2-DICHLOROBENZENE ortho dichlorobenzene 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE meta dichlorobenzene 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE para dichlorobenzene Compounds have similar chemical properties but different physical properties

47 © 2003 JONATHAN HOPTON & KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING
THE CHEMISTRY OF ARENES THE END © 2003 JONATHAN HOPTON & KNOCKHARDY PUBLISHING


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