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Carbon compounds destabilization mechanisms

Substitution reactions by the ionization mechanism proceed very slowly on a-halo derivatives of ketones, aldehydes, acids, esters, nitriles, and related compounds. As discussed on p. 284, such substituents destabilize a carbocation intermediate. Substitution by the direct displacement mechanism, however, proceed especially readily in these systems. Table S.IS indicates some representative relative rate accelerations. Steric effects be responsible for part of the observed acceleration, since an sfp- caibon, such as in a carbonyl group, will provide less steric resistance to tiie incoming nucleophile than an alkyl group. The major effect is believed to be electronic. The adjacent n-LUMO of the carbonyl group can interact with the electnai density that is built up at the pentacoordinate carbon. This can be described in resonance terminology as a contribution flom an enolate-like stmeture to tiie transition state. In MO terminology,.the low-lying LUMO has a... [Pg.301]

A considerable number of ring-fluorinated diazines undergoes various nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions. Nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions follow the well-established two-step addition-elimination mechanism via a Meisenheimer intermediate. The destabilization of sp -C bound fluorine by p-Jt repulsion activates fluorinated aromatic compounds toward nucleophilic attack and subsequent substitution. The susceptibility of the carbon center toward nucleophiles is also enhanced by the negative inductive (-la) effect of fluorine. Therefore the ease of nucleophilic halogen replacement - F>Cl>Br>I - is in the opposite order to that for aliphatic... [Pg.326]


See other pages where Carbon compounds destabilization mechanisms is mentioned: [Pg.213]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.2186]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.2185]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.250]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.244 ]




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