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Aromatic Compounds

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Chapter 5 Aromatic Compounds Aromatic compound: A term used to classify benzene and its derivatives containing 6-membered rings with 3 double bonds Arene: An aromatic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aromatic Compounds


1
Chapter 5
Aromatic Compounds
2
Aromatic Compounds
  • Aromatic compound A term used to classify
    benzene and its derivatives containing 6-membered
    rings with 3 double bonds
  • Arene An aromatic hydrocarbon
  • Aryl group A group derived from an aromatic
    compound by removal of an H give the symbol Ar-

3
Structure of Benzene The Kekulé Proposal
  • C6H6
  • Six-numbered ring, with three double bonds

4
Structure of BenzeneThe Resonance Proposal
  • In benzene, each carbon-carbon connection is an
    average of 1.5 bonds, midway between a single
    bond and a double bond
  • All carbon-carbon bonds in benzene are the same
    length, 0.139 nm long
  • Most C-C single bonds have lengths near 0.154 nm
  • Most CC double bonds are about 0.134 nm long

5
  • An orbital view of benzene shows the situation
    more clearly, emphasizing the cyclic conjugation
    of the benzene molecule and the equivalence of
    the six carbon-carbon bonds
  • The carbon skeleton is a regular hexagon, with
    all C-C-C and H-C-C bond angles 120
  • Each the six carbon atoms has a p orbital that
    can overlap equally well neighboring p orbitals
    on both sides

6
Naming Aromatic Compounds
  • Monosubstituted alkylbenzenes are named as
    derivatives of benzene
  • The same as other hydrocarbons, only with
    benzene used as the parent chain
  • But many common names are retained

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  • Disubstituted Benzenes Locate the two groups by
    numbers or by the locators ortho (1,2-), meta
    (1,3-), and para (1,4-)
  • where one group imparts a special name, name the
    compound as a derivative of that molecule
  • where neither group imparts a special name,
    locate the groups and list them in alphabetical
    order

9
  • Benzenes with more than two substituents are
    named by numbering the position of each
    substituent on the ring so that the lowest
    possible number are used

10
  • Practice

11
Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions
Bromination
  • The most characteristic reaction of aromatic
    compounds is electrophilic aromatic substitution
  • An electron-poor reagent (an electrophile, E)
    reacts with the electron-rich aromatic ring (a
    nucleophile) and substitutes for one of the ring
    hydrogens

12
  • Many different substituents can be introduced
    onto the aromatic ring by electrophilic
    substitution
  • Halogenate the aromatic ring (substitute a
    halogen -F, -Cl,
  • Nitrate (nitro group -NO2)
  • Sulfonate (sulfonic acid group -SO3H)
  • Alkylate (alkyl group -R)
  • Acylate (acyl group -COR)

13
  • All these reactions take place by a simple
    mechanism
  • Bromination of benzene
  • FeBr3 as catalyst

Substitution Addition
14
  • The aromatic rings are less reactive toward
    electrophiles than alkenes are
  • Br2 in CH2Cl2 solution reacts instantly with most
    alkenes but does not react with benzene
  • A catalyst such as FeBr3 is needed
  • The catalyst makes the molecule Br2 more
    electrophilic by reacting with it to give FeBr4-
    and Br
  • FeBr3 Br2 ?
    FeBr4- Br
  • A base (FeBr4-) removes H from the
    bromine-bearing carbon to yield the neutral
    aromatic substitution product

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Other Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
Reactions
Chlorination and Iodination
(Antiallergy)
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Nitration The electrophile is the nitronium
ion, NO2, generated as reaction of nitric
acid The two-step nitration/reduction sequence is
a key part of the industrial synthesis of many
dyes and pharmaceutical agents
20
  • Sulfonation
  • Aromatic rings react with so-called fuming
    sulfuric acid, a mixture of SO3 and H2SO4
  • The reactive electrophile is HSO3
  • A key step in the synthesis of such compounds as
    the sulfa drug family of antibiotics

21
The Friedel-Crafts Alkylation and Acylation
Reactions
  • Alkylation
  • Friedel-Crafts alkylation forms a new C-C bond
    between a benzene ring and an alkyl group
  • Catalyst AlCl3
  • Electrophile is a carboncation, R
  • Friedel-Crafts reactions do not succeed on
    aromatic rings substituted by the groups NO2,
    -COR

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  • Acylation
  • Friedel-Crafts acylation forms a new C-C bond
    between a benzene ring and an acyl group

24
Substituent Effects in Electrophilic Aromatic
Substitution
  • Substituents already present on an aromatic ring
    have two effects
  • Substituents affect the reactivity of the
    aromatic ring
  • Activate
  • Deactivate
  • Substituents affect the orientation of the
    reaction
  • Ortho, meta, and para

(deactivator)
(activator)
25
(activator) ortho-para directing
(deactivator) meta directing
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An Explanation of Substituent Effects
  • Activating and deactivating effects in aromatic
    rings
  • Activating groups donate electrons to the ring,
    thereby making the ring more electron-rich,
    stabilizing the carbocation intermediate, and
    lowering the activation energy for its formation
  • Deactivating groups withdraw electrons from the
    ring, thereby making the ring more electron-poor,
    destabilizing the carbocation intermediate, and
    raising the activation energy for its formation

29
d-
H
d-
d
O?H
Cl
d
d-
C O
d
30
Orienting effects in aromatic rings Ortho and
para directors
31
Orienting effects in aromatic rings Meta
directors
32
Oxidation and Reduction of Aromatic Compounds
  • Benzene is unaffected by strong oxidizing agents
    such as H2CrO4 and KMnO4
  • halogen and nitro substituents are unaffected by
    these reagents
  • Alkyl groups attached to aromatic ring are
    readily attacked by oxidizing agents and are
    converted into carboxyl group (-COOH)

33
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
34
  • Benzene is also inert to reduction under typical
    hydrogenation condition
  • If high temperature and pressures are used

35
Other Aromatic Compounds
  • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) contain
    two or more aromatic rings, each pair of which
    shares two ring carbons

(Carcinogenic substances)
(in mothballs)
36
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    ????,?????????????????????(Benzopyrene)?
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    )??????????????????,?????,??????????,?????????????
    ??,???????.????(mg) ,???????????????????????????,W
    HO?????????????????10ppb,?????????????????1ppb
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    ??,?????????????????????10ppb( ???1ppb1mg/ L
    ,??1ppb1mg/ L)?????,???????????????????????????,?
    ????????????

37
Parabens
  • Parabens are a class of chemicals widely used as
    preservatives by cosmetic and pharmaceutical
    industries
  • They are becoming increasingly controversial,
    however, because they have been found in breast
    cancer tumors (an average of 20 ng/g of tissue)
  • Parabens have also displayed the ability to
    slightly mimic estrogen (a hormone known to play
    a role in the development of breast cancer). No
    effective direct links between parabens and
    cancer have been established, however
  • Another concern is that the estrogen-mimic aspect
    of parabens may be a factor in the increasing
    prevalence of early puberty in girls
  • Studies indicate that methylparaben applied on
    the skin may react with UVB leading to increased
    skin aging and DNA damage

38
The concept of Aromaticity
  • Heterocyclic compound contains one or more atoms
    other than carbon in a ring
  • Pyridine and pyrimidine are heterocyclic analogs
    of benzene. Each is aromatic.

39
  • Aromatic character
  • Have an uninterrupted (continued) cloud of
    delocalized p electrons circling above and below
    the plane of the molecule. (planar and cyclic)
  • Have one 2p orbital on each atom of the ring
  • Have six p electrons (3 pairs), or odd number of
    pairs of p electrons

40
Organic Synthesis
  • The only trick to devising an organic synthesis
    is to work backward
  • What is the immediate precursor of that product
  • Work back again, one step at a time
  • Until a suitable starting material is found

41
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PRACTICE
44
Step 1
Step 2
45
Step 3
a
b
Solution
46
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