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Substitution aliphatic

A more detailed classification of chemical reactions will give specifications on the mechanism of a reaction electrophilic aromatic substitution, nucleophilic aliphatic substitution, etc. Details on this mechanism can be included to various degrees thus, nucleophilic aliphatic substitutions can further be classified into Sf l and reactions. However, as reaction conditions such as a change in solvent can shift a mechanism from one type to another, such details are of interest in the discussion of reaction mechanism but less so in reaction classification. [Pg.173]

The attack by a reagent of a molecule might be hampered by the presence of other atoms near the reaction site. The larger these atoms and the more are there, the higher is the geometric restriction, the steric hindrance, on reactivity. Figure 3-6e illustrates this for the attack of a nucleophile on the substrate in a nucleophilic aliphatic substitution reaction. [Pg.178]

Thus, to name just a few examples, a nucleophilic aliphatic substitution such as the reaction of the bromide 3.5 with sodium iodide (Figure 3-21a) can lead to a range of stereochemical products, from a l l mbrture of 3.6 and 3.7 (racemization) to only 3.7 (inversion) depending on the groups a, b, and c that are bonded to the central carbon atom. The ring closure of the 1,3-butadiene, 3.8, to cyclobutene... [Pg.196]

Figure 3-22 shows a nucleophilic aliphatic substitution with cyanide ion as a nucleophile, i his reaction is assumed to proceed according to the S f2 mechanism with an inversion in the stereochemistry at the carbon atom of the reaction center. We have to assign a stereochemical mechanistic factor to this reaction, and, clearly, it is desirable to assign a mechanistic factor of (-i-1) to a reaction with retention of configuration and (-1) to a reaction with inversion of configuration. Thus, we want to calculate the parity of the product, of 3 reaction from the parity of the... [Pg.198]

Nucleophilic aliphatic substitution (Chapter 8) Reaction m which a nucleophile replaces a leaving group usually a halide ion from sp hybridized carbon Nucleophilic aliphatic substitution may proceed by either an S l or an Sfj2 mechanism... [Pg.1289]

Halogenated plastic Polyaromatic hydrocarbons Aliphatics Substituted benzenes Halogenated aliphatics Dioxins and furans... [Pg.42]

Non-halogenated plastics Polycyclic aromatic compounds Aliphatics Substituted benzenes... [Pg.42]

The thenyl chlorides appear to be more reactive in nucleophilic aliphatic substitution than the benzyl analogs. Thus, 2-thenyh chloride gives, in the reaction with sodium cyanide in ethanol, a mixture of ethyl 2-thenyl ether (25% yield) and 2-thenyl cyanide (32% yield), whereas benzyl chloride gives a high 3deld of benzyl cyanide uncontaminated with benzyl ether. When 2-thenyl chloride and benzyl chloride were allowed to compete for a deficiency of sodium amyloxide, 2-thenyl chloride reacted three times faster. In acetone solution 2-thenyl cyanide is obtained smoothl. ... [Pg.88]

With Sulfur Nucleophiles N-Carboxy-protected aziridine-2-carboxylates react with thiols to give P-mercapto-ot-amino acid derivatives. The reaction is usually catalyzed by BF3 and the yields range from fair to excellent [15, 16, 108-111]. With N-unprotected 3-substituted aziridine-2-carboxylates, the ring-opening with thiols usually takes place with anti stereoselectivity, especially in the case of the C-3 aliphatic substituted substrates. In cases in which C-3 is aromatic, however, the stereoselectivity has been found to be a function of the substitution pattern on the aromatic ring 3-p-methoxy ph eri yl-su bs li In led aziridines 143a (Scheme 3.51) and... [Pg.93]

In TFE the secondary isotope effect for solvolysis ( h/ d3)s is found to have the value 1.46 and that for Na,Np-rearrangement (kH/kD3)r has the value 1.42 (Szele and Zollinger, 1981). The two isotope effects are similar to the largest values observed in nucleophilic aliphatic substitutions following the DN + AN mechanism (Shiner,... [Pg.174]

There is a special interest in the role of neighboring group participation by sulfinyl groups in nucleophilic aliphatic substitution. Thus Martin and Uebel218 found that trans-4-chlorothiane-S-oxide 36 is solvolyzed (50% v/v aqueous ethanol, 140 °C) 630 times faster than the cis isomer 37. This was attributed to the intervention of 38 for the former. [Pg.530]

Much less work has been done on electrophilic aliphatic substitution mechanisms than on nucleophilic substitutions, and the exact mechanisms of many of the reactions in this chapter are in doubt. For many of them, not enough work has been done to permit us to decide which of the mechanisms described in this chapter is operating, if indeed any is. There may be other electrophilic substitution mechanisms, and some of the reactions in this chapter may not even be electrophilic substitutions at all. [Pg.767]

Since aromatic substitutions, aliphatic substitutions, additions and conjugate additions to carbonyl compounds, cycloadditions, and ring expansion reactions catalyzed by Fe salts have recently been summarized [17], this section will focus on reactions in which iron salts produce a critical activation on unsaturated functional groups provided by the Lewis-acid character of these salts. [Pg.4]

In a faster, selective and cleaner applications of the microwave-accelerated reactions, Stone-Elander et al. have synthesized a variety of radiolabeled (with 3H, 11C, and 19F) organic compounds via the nucleophilic aromatic and aliphatic substitution reactions, esterifications, condensations, hydrolysis and complexation reactions using monomodal MW cavities on microscale [121]. A substantially reduced level of radioactive waste is generated in these procedures that are discussed, at length, in Chapt. 13 [122]. [Pg.211]


See other pages where Substitution aliphatic is mentioned: [Pg.178]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.977]    [Pg.977]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.494]    [Pg.529]    [Pg.759]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.494]    [Pg.529]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.397]   


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