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كليات المجموعة العلمية (الطب البشري - طب الأسنان - الطب البيطري - العلوم الطبية التطبيقية - العلاج الطبيعي - الصيدلة - التمريض - العلوم - الزراعة) |
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أدوات الموضوع | انواع عرض الموضوع |
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Organic Reactionsد//عاطف خليفه
The Mechanism of Reduction Reactions Two fundamentally different reducing agents have been used to add hydrogen across a double bond. A metal can be used to catalyze the reaction between hydrogen gas and the C=C double bond in an alkene. Nucleophilic Attack By Water Chloral hydrate Chloral hydrate is a white solid formed by adding a molecule of water across the C=O double bond in the corresponding aldehyde. The rate of this reaction can be studied by following the incorporation of isotopically labeled water. The vast majority (99.76%) of water molecules contain 16O, but some contain 17O (0.04%) or 18O (0.2%). When acetone is dissolved in a sample of water that has been enriched in 18O, it gradually picks up the 18O isotope. Acid and Base Catalyzed Hydration The role of the acid catalyst is easy to understand. Protonation of the oxygen atom increases the polarity of the carbonyl bond. Acid-catalyzed hydration: Step 1 Acid-catalyzed hydration: Step 2 Base-catalyzed hydration: Step 1 Base-catalyzed hydration: Step 2 Attack by a weaker nucleophile, such as water, is a reversible reaction that can occur in either direction. Nucleophilic Attack by an Alcohol Acid-catalyzed reaction of an alcohol with a carbonyl The product of this reaction is known as a hemiacetal (literally, "half of an acetal"). If an anhydrous acid is added to a solution of the aldehyde in a large excess of alcohol, the reaction continues to form an acetal. A hemiacetal Acetals, on the other hand, contain a carbon atom that has two OR groups. An acetal Hemiacetals and acetals play an important role in the chemistry of carbohydrates. Consider what would happen, for example, if the OH group on the fifth carbon atom in a glucose molecule attacked the aldehyde at other end of this molecule. a-D-Glucopyranose orb-D-Glucopyranose or An analogous intramolecular reaction can occur within a fructose molecule. a-D-Fructofuranoseb-D-Fructofuranose Sugars, such as glucose and fructose, can be linked to form complex carbohydrates by forming an acetal linkage between the OH group on one sugar and the hemiacetal on the other. Sucrose, or cane sugar, for example, is an acetal formed by linking -D-gluco-pyranose and -D-fructofuranose residues. Sucrose Addition/Elimination Reactions of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives The following reaction can be used to illustrate the synthesis of an ester from a carboxylic acid As might be expected, the first step in this reaction involves attack by a nucleophile at the positively charged end of the C=O double bond. A pair of nonbonding electrons on the oxygen atom of the alcohol is donated to the carbon atom of the carbonyl to form a CO bond. As this bond forms, the electrons in the bond of the carbonyl are displaced onto the oxygen atom. A proton is then transferred back to the solvent to give a tetrahedral addition intermediate. Nucleophilic addition Nucleophilic elimination Free Radical Reactions The starting point for reactions at a carbonyl involves attack by a nucleophile on the carbon atom of the C=O double bond. Free-radical halogenation of an alkane occurs by a very different mechanism. The first step in these reactions is the homolytic splitting of a bond to give a pair of free radicals. Chain initiation A series of reactions then occurs that involves a chain-reaction. Consider the chlorination of propane, for example. A Cl· atom can attack the CH3 group at one end of the molecule. Chain propagation Chain propagation Chain propagation The difference between these radicals can be appreciated by considering the energy it takes to break the CH bond in the following compounds. H = -381 kJ/molrxn H = -395 kJ/molrxn H = -410 kJ/molrxn These data suggest that it takes less energy to break a CH bond as the number of alkyl groups on the carbon atom that contains this bond increases. This can be explained by assuming that the products of the bond-breaking reaction become more stable as the number of alkyl groups increases. Or, in other words, 3º radicals are more stable than 2º radicals, which are more stable than 1º radicals. Most of our knowledge of the mechanisms of chemical reactions has come from the study of the factors that influence the rate of these reactions. The type of reaction that has been studied more than any other involves attack by a nucleophile on a saturated carbon atom. Consider the following reaction, for example, which converts an alkyl bromide into an alcohol. The rate of this reaction is first-order in both CH3Br and the OH- ion, and second-order overall. Rate = k(CH3Br)(OH-) In the 1930s, Sir Christopher Ingold proposed a mechanism for this reaction in which both the alkyl halide and the hydroxyl ion are involved in the rate-limiting or slowest step of the reaction. The OH- ion attacks the "backside" of the CH3Br molecule. (It attacks the carbon atom at a point directly opposite to the Br substituent or leaving group.) When this happens, a pair of nonbonding electrons on the OH- ion are used to form a covalent bond to the carbon atom at the same time that the carbon-bromine is broken, as shown in the figure below.Because the rate-limiting step in this reaction involves both the CH3Br and OH- molecules, it is called a bimolecular nucleophilic substitution, or SN2, reaction. The most important point to remember about the mechanism of SN2 reactions is that they occur in a single step. The species in the middle of Figure O3.2 is known as a transition state. If you envision this reaction as an endless series of snapshots that capture the infinitesimally small changes which occur as one bond forms and the other bond breaks, the transition state is the snapshot in this series that has the highest energy and is therefore the least stable. The transition state has an infinitesimally short lifetime, on the order of 10-12 seconds. In the course of an SN2 reaction, the other three substituents on the carbon atom are "flipped" from one side of the atom to the other. This inevitably leads to inversion of the configuration at a stereocenter. Consider the following reaction, for example, in which cis-1-bromo-3-methylcyclopentane is converted into trans-3-methylcyclopentanol. Or the reaction in which the 2-butanol. R isomer of 2-bromobutane is transformed into the S isomer of Unimolecular Nucleophilic Substitution or SN1 Reactions The kinetics of nucleophilic substitution reactions have been studied in greater detail than any other type of reaction because they don't always proceed through the same mechanism. Consider the reaction between the OH- ion and t-butyl bromide, for example. Rate = k((CH3)3CBr) Ingold and coworkers argued that this rate law is consistent with a mechanism in which the rate-limiting or slowest step involves the breaking of the carbon-bromine bond to form a pair of ions. As one might expect, the pair of electrons in the CBr bond end up on the more electronegative bromine atom. Rate-limiting step: The first step in this mechanism is a relatively slow reaction. (The activation energy for this step is roughly 80 kJ/mol.) If this reaction is done in water, the next step is extremely fast. The (CH3)3C+ ion is a Lewis acid because it has an empty orbital that can be used to accept a pair of electrons. Water, on the other hand, is a reasonably good Lewis base. A Lewis acid-base reaction therefore rapidly occurs in which a pair of nonbonding electrons on a water molecule are donated to the carbocation to form a covalent CO bond. The central carbon atom in the t-butyl carbocation formed in the first step of this reaction is planar, as shown in the figure below. Regardless of whether we start with the R or S isomer, we get the same intermediate when the CBr bond breaks. The intermediate formed in the first step in the SN1 mechanism is therefore achiral. Mixtures of equal quantities of the +/- or R/S stereoisomers of a compound are said to be racemic. This term traces back to the Latin racemus, which means "a cluster of grapes." Just as there is an equal probability of finding grapes on either side of the stem in a cluster of grapes, there is an equal probability of finding the R and S enantiomers in a racemic mixture. SN1 reactions are therefore said to proceed with racemization. If we start with a pure sample of (R)-2-bromobutane, for example, we expect the product of the SN1 reaction with the OH- ion to be a racemic mixture of the two enantiomers of 2-butanol. We are now ready to address a pair of important questions. First, why does CH3Br react with the OH- ion by the SN2 mechanism if (CH3)3CBr does not? The SN2 mechanism requires direct attack by the OH- ion on the carbon atom that carries the CBr bond. It is much easier for the OH- ion to get past the small hydrogen atoms in CH3Br than it is for this ion to get past the bulkier CH3 groups in (CH3)3CBr. Why, then, does (CH3)3CBr react with the OH- ion by the SN1 mechanism if CH3Br does not? The SN1 reaction proceeds through a carbocation intermediate, and the stability of these ions decreases in the following order. They can donate electron density to a neighboring group. This tends to delocalize the charge over a larger volume of the molecule, which stabilizes the carbocation. When we encountered a similar phenomenon in the chemistry of free radicals we noted that 3º radicals are roughly 30 kJ/mol more stable than 1 radicals. In this case, the difference is much larger. A 3º carbocation is 340 kJ/mol more stable than a 1º carbocation! As a result, it is much easier for (CH3)3CBr to form a carbocation intermediate than it is for CH3Br to undergo a similar reaction. In theory, both starting materials could undergo both reaction mechanisms. But the rate of SN2 reactions for CH3Br are much faster than the corresponding SN1 reactions, whereas the rate of SN1 reactions for (CH3)3CBr are very much faster than SN2 reactions Elimination Reactions Why do we need to worry about whether a nucleophilic substitution reaction occurs by an SN1 or SN2 mechanism? At first glance, it would appear that the same product is obtained regardless of the mechanism of the reaction. Consider the following substitution reaction, for example. The importance of understanding the mechanism of nucleophilic substitution reactions can best be appreciated by studying the distribution of products of the example given above. When 2-bromopropane is allowed to react with the methoxide ion in methanol, less than half of the starting material is converted into methyl isopropyl ether; the rest is transformed into 2-propene. Starting materials that are likely to undergo an bimolecular SN2 reaction undergo elimination reactions by a bimolecular E2 mechanism. This is a one-step reaction in which the nucleophile attacks a CH bond on the carbon atom adjacent to the site of SN2 reaction. Starting materials that are likely to undergo a unimolecular SN1 reaction undergo elimination reactions by a unimolecular E1 mechanism. As might be expected, the rate-limiting step is the formation of the carbocation. Rate-limiting Step: Substitution Versus Elimination Reactions There are three ways of pushing the reaction between an alkyl halide and a nucleophile toward elimination instead of substitution.
Summary of Substitution/Elimination Reactions
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دكتور عاطف خليفة كيميائي 500 امتحان كيمياء |
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الف شكر لحضرتك يااستاذ عاطف....وكفايه ان موضوعاتك هتبقي مراجع لطلاب كليه العلوم علي المنتدي هذا العام والأعوام القادمه ان شاء ربنا..
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https://www.facebook.com/islam.nasr.7 |
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كتير مشكور وانا فعلا كنت محتاجاها جدا بس مش شوفتها غير بعد ما خلصت الامتحان
حصل خير وممكن لو اخدت الماده لاقدر الله السنه الجايه تانى استفيد منها |
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و الله ما انا اااهم حااجه
بس تقريبا دي عضويه اصلي لسه مستني الكليه و ناوي ادخل عللووم باذن الله
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w a5ern w l2owl Mara Ensan Msh Shayfk Mn Bara Ensan 7ass B2lbek 2bl Ma 3yno Tshofek Ya Malaky ... Manta wa7shny aywa wa7shny Wa 23esh ezaaay .. W May7rmnesh Mnk Wala Yb3dnesh 3nk 7beby ya 3omry Matsbnesh w7yat a8la 7aga 3ndk .. Tab 5aly el Donya Tday2k Yom Wshof ana Ha3ml aa Fel Donya
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شكرااااااا
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العلامات المرجعية |
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