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Aromatic compounds relative reactivities

The above definition implies that the reactivity of an aromatic compound depends upon the reaction which is used to measure it, for the rate of reaction of an aromatic compound relative to that for benzene varies from reaction to reaction (table 7.1). However, whilst a compoimd s reactivity can be given no unique value, different substitution reactions do generally set aromatic compoimds in the same sequence of relative reactivities. [Pg.123]

It is clear from a recent review of the mechanisms of metal-catalyzed oxidations of hydrocarbons (89) that by far the most extensive studies have been on the oxidation of alkenes and aromatic compounds relatively little work on alkane oxidation is to be found. The studies on these reactions show that, if the reactivity is enhanced by a hard metal, it is often because the metal becomes involved in the free-radical reactions and generates further free radicals by the chain decomposition of hydroperoxides (39) ... [Pg.182]

The absolute rates of electrophilic substitution reactions have been measured only in a few cases. The relative rates of reaction at different positions in a given compound can, however, be found from the proportions of the various isomers formed by substitution in a given compound, while the reactivities of positions in two different compounds Ar and Ar2 can be estimated from the amounts of the products formed when a mixture of Ari and Ar2 undergoes substitution. The rate of reaction at a given position in an aromatic compound relative to the rate of substitution of a single position in benzene under the same conditions is called the partial rate factor (PRF). From equation (5.261), we have... [Pg.319]

The operation of the nitronium ion in these media was later proved conclusively. "- The rates of nitration of 2-phenylethanesulphonate anion ([Aromatic] < c. 0-5 mol l i), toluene-(U-sulphonate anion, p-nitrophenol, A(-methyl-2,4-dinitroaniline and A(-methyl-iV,2,4-trinitro-aniline in aqueous solutions of nitric acid depend on the first power of the concentration of the aromatic. The dependence on acidity of the rate of 0-exchange between nitric acid and water was measured, " and formal first-order rate constants for oxygen exchange were defined by dividing the rates of exchange by the concentration of water. Comparison of these constants with the corresponding results for the reactions of the aromatic compounds yielded the scale of relative reactivities sho-wn in table 2.1. [Pg.10]

For the last two compounds, first-order rates were observed towards the end of the reactions, enabling the reactivities of these compounds relative to that of water to be estimated (table 2.1). The nitration of 2-mesitylethanesulphonate anion was independent of the concentration of the aromatic over 80 % of its course, and because the final part of the reaction did not obey a truly first-order law its reactivity could not be estimated. [Pg.11]

Unfortunately, insufficient data make it impossible to know whether the activity coefficients of all aromatic compounds vary slightly, or whether certain compounds, or groups of compounds, show unusual behaviour. However, it seems that slight variations in relative rates might arise from these differences, and that comparisons of reactivity are less sound in relatively concentrated solutions. [Pg.25]

It may seem, at first sight, paradoxical that a competition reaction carried out under conditions in which the measured rate is independent of the concentration of the aromatic can tell us about the relative reactivities of two aromatics. Obviously, the measured rate has nothing to do with the rate of the product-determining step, and what is important in determining relative reactivities is the ratio of the values of ( 3.2.4) for two compounds. The criteria to be met for a correct application of the competitive method are well understood. ... [Pg.46]

Dewar and his co-workers, as mentioned above, investigated the reactivities of a number of polycyclic aromatic compounds because such compounds could provide data especially suitable for comparison with theoretical predictions ( 7.2.3). This work was extended to include some compounds related to biphenyl. The results were obtained by successively compounding pairs of results from competitive nitrations to obtain a scale of reactivities relative to that of benzene. Because the compounds studied were very reactive, the concentrations of nitric acid used were relatively small, being o-i8 mol 1 in the comparison of benzene with naphthalene, 5 x io mol 1 when naphthalene and anthanthrene were compared, and 3 x io mol 1 in the experiments with diphenylamine and carbazole. The observed partial rate factors are collected in table 5.3. Use of the competitive method in these experiments makes them of little value as sources of information about the mechanisms of the substitutions which occurred this shortcoming is important because in the experiments fuming nitric acid was used, rather than nitric acid free of nitrous acid, and with the most reactive compounds this leads to a... [Pg.82]

If acetoxylation were a conventional electrophilic substitution it is hard to understand why it is not more generally observed in nitration in acetic anhydride. The acetoxylating species is supposed to be very much more selective than the nitrating species, and therefore compared with the situation in (say) toluene in which the ratio of acetoxylation to nitration is small, the introduction of activating substituents into the aromatic nucleus should lead to an increase in the importance of acetoxylation relative to nitration. This is, in fact, observed in the limited range of the alkylbenzenes, although the apparently severe steric requirement of the acetoxylation species is a complicating feature. The failure to observe acetoxylation in the reactions of compounds more reactive than 2-xylene has been attributed to the incursion of another mechan-104... [Pg.104]

The behaviour of benzene is the datum from which any discussion of aromatic compoimds must start the reactivity of an aromatic compound is its rate of reaction relative to that of benzene when both are taking part in reactions occurring under the same conditions and proceeding by the same mechanism. [Pg.123]

There are certain limitations to the usefulness of nitration in aqueous sulphuric acid. Because of the behaviour of the rate profile for benzene, comparisons should strictly be made below 68% sulphuric acid ( 2.5 fig. 2.5) rates relative to benzene vary in the range 68-80% sulphuric acid, and at the higher end of this range are not entirely measures of relative reactivity. For deactivated compounds this limitation is not very important, but for activated compounds it is linked with a fundamental limit to the significance of the concept of aromatic reactivity as already discussed ( 2.5), nitration in sulphuric acid cannot differentiate amongst compounds not less than about 38 times more reactive than benzene. At this point differentiation disappears because reactions occur at the encounter rate. [Pg.124]

I itro-DisplacementPolymerization. The facile nucleophilic displacement of a nitro group on a phthalimide by an oxyanion has been used to prepare polyetherimides by heating bisphenoxides with bisnitrophthalimides (91). For example with 4,4 -dinitro monomers, a polymer with the Ultem backbone is prepared as follows (92). Because of the high reactivity of the nitro phthalimides, the polymerkation can be carried out at temperatures below 75°C. Relative reactivities are nitro compounds over halogens, Ai-aryl imides over A/-alkyl imides, and 3-substituents over 4-substituents. Solvents are usually dipolar aprotic Hquids such as dimethyl sulfoxide, and sometimes an aromatic Hquid is used, in addition. [Pg.333]

The numerical value of hardness obtained by MNDO-level calculations correlates with the stability of aromatic compounds. The correlation can be extended to a wider range of compounds, including heterocyclic compounds, when hardness is determined experimentally on the basis of molar reffactivity. The relatively large HOMO-LUMO gap also indicates the absence of relatively high-energy, reactive electrons, in agreement with the reduced reactivity of aromatic compounds toward electrophilic reagents. [Pg.512]

The effect of substituents on electrophilic substitution can be placed on a quantitative basis by use ofpartial rate factors. The reactivity of each position in a substituted aromatic compound can be compared with that of benzene by measuring the overall rate, relative to benzene, and dissecting the total rate by dividing it among the ortho, meta, and para... [Pg.562]

Taft began the LFER attack on steric effects as part of his separation of electronic and steric effects in aliphatic compounds, which is discussed in Section 7.3. For our present purposes we abstract from that treatment the portion relevant to aromatic substrates. Hammett p values for alkaline ester hydrolysis are in the range +2.2 to +2.8, whereas for acid ester hydrolysis p is close to zero (see Table 7-2). Taft, therefore, concluded that electronic effects of substituents are much greater in the alkaline than in the acid series and. in fact, that they are negligible in the acid series. This left the steric effect alone controlling relative reactivity in the acid series. A steric substituent constant was defined [by analogy with the definition of cr in Eq. (7-22)] by Eq. (7-43), where k is the rate constant for acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of an orr/to-substituted benzoate ester and k is the corresponding rate constant for the on/to-methyl ester note that CH3, not H, is the reference substituent. ... [Pg.335]

The acid cleavage of the aryl— silicon bond (desilylation), which provides a measure of the reactivity of the aromatic carbon of the bond, has been applied to 2- and 3-thienyl trimethylsilane, It was found that the 2-isomer reacted only 43.5 times faster than the 3-isomer and 5000 times faster than the phenyl compound at 50,2°C in acetic acid containing aqueous sulfuric acid. The results so far are consistent with the relative reactivities of thiophene upon detritia-tion if a linear free-energy relationship between the substituent effect in detritiation and desilylation is assumed, as the p-methyl group activates about 240 (200-300) times in detritiation with aqueous sulfuric acid and about 18 times in desilylation. A direct experimental comparison of the difference between benzene and thiophene in detritiation has not been carried out, but it may be mentioned that even in 80.7% sulfuric acid, benzene is detritiated about 600 times slower than 2-tritiothiophene. The aforementioned consideration makes it probable that under similar conditions the ratio of the rates of detritiation of thiophene and benzene is larger than in the desilylation. A still larger difference in reactivity between the 2-position of thiophene and benzene has been found for acetoxymercuration which... [Pg.44]

Through a study of the influence of thiophene and other aromatic compounds on the retardation and chain transfer on the polymerization of styrene by stannic chloride, the relative rates of attack of a carbonium-ion pair could be obtained. It was found that thiophene in this reaction was about 100 times more reactive than p-xylene and somewhat less reactive than anisole. ... [Pg.45]

The term aromatic will be used in a strict non-historical sense to mean possessing a cyclic 7r-electron system (6 and 10 electrons for the mono- and bi-cyclic rings discussed in this review). Heteroaromatic compounds, like carboaromatics, have widely different degrees and types of electronic dissymmetry and polarizabihty. Consequently, their reactivity varies tremendously with any one reagent and their relative reactivity changes drastically with the type of reagent. In this sense, aromatic compounds show differences in reactivity but not in aromaticity. The virtues of this qiuilitative concept of aromaticity and the pitfalls of trying to use it as a quantitative concept in modern context have been ably presented by Peters and by Balaban and Simon. ... [Pg.147]

Specific alterations of the relative reactivity due to hydrogen bonding in the transition state or to a cyclic transition state or to electrostatic attraction in quaternary compounds or protonated azines are included below (cf. also Sections II, B, 3 II, B, 5 II, C and II, F). A-Protonation is often reflected in an increase in JS and therefore the relative reactivity can vary with the significance of JS in controlling the reaction rate. Variation can also result from rate determination by the second stage of the SjjAr2 mechanism or from the intervention of thermodynamic control of product formation. Variation in the rate and in the reactivity pattern of polyazanaph-thalenes will result when nucleophilic substitution [Eq. (10)] occurs only on a covalent adduct (408) of the substrate rather than on its aromatic form (400). This covalent addition is prevented by any 4-... [Pg.362]

The competitive method employed for determining relative rates of substitution in homolytic phenylation cannot be applied for methylation because of the high reactivity of the primary reaction products toward free methyl radicals. Szwarc and his co-workers, however, developed a technique for measuring the relative rates of addition of methyl radicals to aromatic and heteroaromatic systems. - In the decomposition of acetyl peroxide in isooctane the most important reaction is the formation of methane by the abstraction of hydrogen atoms from the solvent by methyl radicals. When an aromatic compound is added to this system it competes with the solvent for methyl radicals, Eqs, (28) and (29). Reaction (28) results in a decrease in the amount... [Pg.161]

On the basis of the reaction of alkyl radicals with a number of polycyclic aromatics, Szwarc and Binks calculated the relative selectivities of several radicals methyl, 1 (by definition) ethyl, 1.0 n-propyl, 1.0 trichloromethyl, 1.8. The relative reactivities of the three alkyl radicals toward aromatics therefore appears to be the same. On the other hand, quinoline (the only heterocyclic compound so far examined in reactions with alkyl radicals other than methyl) shows a steady increase in its reactivity toward methyl, ethyl, and n-propyl radicals. This would suggest that the nucleophilic character of the alkyl radicals increases in the order Me < Et < n-Pr, and that the selectivity of the radical as defined by Szwarc is not necessarily a measure of its polar character. [Pg.163]

Arenediazonium ions are relatively weak electrophiles, and therefore react only with electron-rich aromatic substrates like aryl amines and phenols. Aromatic compounds like anisole, mesitylene, acylated anilines or phenolic esters are ordinarily not reactive enough to be suitable substrates however they may be coupled... [Pg.85]

Five-membered heteroaromatic ring compounds have been extensively studied in terms of their relative reactivity and specific physicochemical properties. In particular, it is generally accepted that the degree of aromaticity follows the order... [Pg.49]

In studies aimed at understanding the influence of structure on the reactivity of diazonium ions, Diener and Zollinger (1986) found that the NMR chemical shifts of the aromatic or heteroaromatic parent compounds provided a novel probe. This method can be applied both to substituted benzenediazonium ions and to various heteroaromatic diazonium ions, and it also provides semiquantitative information on the relative reactivities of the l,3,4-triazole-2-diazonium ion (12.5) and its deprotonated zwitterion (12.6). [Pg.310]

The nitrosophenol (10), which may be isolated, is oxidised very rapidly by nitric acid to yield the p-nitrophenol (11) and nitrous acid more nitrous acid is produced thereby and the process is progressively speeded up. No nitrous acid need be present initially in the nitric acid for a little of the latter attacks phenol oxidatively to yield HN02. The rate-determining step is again believed to be the formation of the intermediate (9). Some direct nitration of such reactive aromatic compounds by N02 also takes place simultaneously, the relative amount by the two routes depending on the conditions. [Pg.138]

Antimony pentachloride is a reactive Lewis acid that can be used for Friedel-Crafts reactions and some other Lewis-acid-catalyzed reactions. The HF-SbF5 system is known as magic acid, and carbocations are stabilized in this medium.353 By using the HF-SbF5 system, alkylation of acetophenone (a relatively unreactive aromatic compound) has been achieved (Scheme 87). [Pg.436]

Cycloaddition with nitrile oxides occur with compounds of practically any type with a C=C bond alkenes and cycloalkenes, their functional derivatives, dienes and trienes with isolated, conjugated or cumulated double bonds, some aromatic compounds, unsaturated and aromatic heterocycles, and fullerenes. The content of this subsection is classified according to the mentioned types of dipolarophiles. Problems of relative reactivities of dienophiles and dipoles, regio- and stereoselectivity of nitrile oxide cycloadditions were considered in detail by Jaeger and... [Pg.21]

A relatively unique type of reactive metabolite is carbene, i.e., a divalent carbon, which is a proposed intermediate in the oxidation of methylene dioxy-containing compounds. A methylenedioxy group in aromatic compounds is subject to O-dealkylation, e.g., 3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine, as shown in Figure 8.20. The process generates formic acid and the catechol metabolite as final products. However, in the course of the reaction, a... [Pg.159]

To date the structure and reactivity of numerous complexes derived from aromatic compounds and nitrosonium cation have been studied (5, 56-63). However, relatively few studies are available on the nitrosonium complexes of cyclophanes (5, 57, 59, 61, 62), cf ref. (63). The interaction of [2.2]paracyclophane with nitrosonium tetrachloroaluminate was studied by H and 13C NMR spectroscopy using deuterium isotope perturbation technique (64). It was found that the resulting nitrosonium complexes containing one (25) or two NO groups (26) are involved in fast interconversion (on the NMR time scale) (Scheme 17). [Pg.142]


See other pages where Aromatic compounds relative reactivities is mentioned: [Pg.590]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.557]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.627]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.421]    [Pg.98]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.355 , Pg.356 , Pg.357 ]




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