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Carboxylic Acids with Additional Electrophilic Groups

We can illustrate this concept with a reaction of an unlikely looking electrophile, a lithium car-boxylate salt. Towards the beginning of the chapter we said that carboxylic acids were bad electrophiles and that carboxylate salts were even worse. Well, that is true, but with a sufficiently powerful nucleophile (an organolithium) it is just possible to get addition to the carbonyl group of a lithium carboxylate. [Pg.299]

The electrophile shown in step 2 is the proton. In almost all the reactions considered in this chapter the electrophilic attacking atom is either hydrogen or carbon. It may be noted that step 1 is exactly the same as step 1 of the tetrahedral mechanism of nucleophilic substitution at a carbonyl carbon (p. 331), and it might be expected that substitution would compete with addition. However, this is seldom the case. When A and B are H, R, or Ar, the substrate is an aldehyde or ketone and these almost never undergo substitution, owing to the extremely poor nature of H, R, and Ar as leaving groups. For carboxylic acids and their... [Pg.880]

Note that the reaction at the phosphorus atom is postulated to occur by an SN2 (no intermediate formed) rather than by an addition mechanism such as we encountered with carboxylic acid derivatives (Kirby and Warren, 1967). As we learned in Section 13.2, for attack at a saturated carbon atom, OH- is a better nucleophile than H20 by about a factor of 104 (Table 13.2). Toward phosphorus, which is a harder electrophilic center (see Box 13.1), however, the relative nucleophilicity increases dramatically. For triphenyl phosphate, for example, OH- is about 108 times stronger than H20 as a nucleophile (Barnard et al., 1961). Note that in the case of triphenyl phosphate, no substitution may occur at the carbon bound to the oxygen of the alcohol moiety, and therefore, neutral hydrolysis is much less important as compared to the other cases (see /NB values in Table 13.12). Consequently, the base-catalyzed reaction generally occurs at the phosphorus atom leading to the dissociation of the alcohol moiety that is the best leaving group (P-0 cleavage), as is illustrated by the reaction of parathion with OH ... [Pg.538]

The methoxide ion uses of its lone pairs of electrons to form a bond to the electrophilic carbonyl carbon of the acid chloride. Simultaneously, the relatively weak n bond of the carbonyl group breaks and both of the n electrons move onto the carbonyl oxygen to give it a third lone pair of electrons and a negative charge. This is exactly the same first step involved in nucleophilic addition to aldehydes and ketones. However, with an aldehyde or a ketone, the tetrahedral structure is the final product. With carboxylic acid derivatives, the lone pair of electrons on oxygen return to reform the carbonyl n bond (Step 2). As this happens, the C-Cl o bond breaks with both electrons moving onto the chlorine to form a chloride ion that departs the molecule. [Pg.166]


See other pages where Carboxylic Acids with Additional Electrophilic Groups is mentioned: [Pg.747]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.1173]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.1335]    [Pg.1337]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.468]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.653]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.855]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.604]    [Pg.844]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.858]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.604]    [Pg.969]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.831]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.403]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.25]   


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Acids carboxyl group

Additive group additions

Carboxyl groups acidity

Carboxylic Acid Additives

Carboxylic acid groups

Carboxylic acids addition

Electrophiles, addition with

Electrophilic groups

Group additivity

With Electrophiles

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