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Mistakes in Arrow Pushing

A common mistake for beginning students is to erroneously write an arrow pointing from the H of the acetic acid to the O atom of the hydroxide anion. This is wrong, because such an arrow would be indicating the H atom movement directly, not electron movement. Other common mistakes in arrow pushing are given in Appendix 10. [Pg.247]

Likely the most common mistake is pushing the arrow backwards. In other words, the arrow is started at a sink and ended at a source. Three examples are given below. The easiest way to avoid this mistake is to remember that the arrow must start from an electron rich region of a molecule. Most important, the arrow always starts with two electrons—namely, lone pairs, o bonds, or tt bonds. Do not use the positive regions of a molecule to start an arrow. The vast majority of the time the arrow will terminate at a center with some positive charge or a center that can accept a lone pair. [Pg.1065]


See other pages where Mistakes in Arrow Pushing is mentioned: [Pg.25]    [Pg.1266]    [Pg.1267]    [Pg.1268]    [Pg.1269]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.1266]    [Pg.1267]    [Pg.1268]    [Pg.1269]    [Pg.1266]    [Pg.1266]    [Pg.1267]    [Pg.1268]    [Pg.1067]    [Pg.1014]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.1066]    [Pg.24]   


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