A Guidebook to Mechanism in Organic Chemistry

(Barry) #1
Types of Reaction



SOS"
SCN slow



/ HCN
\ fast
CN

y

OH



  • eCN
    CN
    Elimination reactions are, of course, essentially the reversal of
    addition reactions; the mosU^ommon is the loss of atoms or groups
    from adjacent carbon atoms to yield defines:


H



C— C /
\
Br
* H

OH

,-HBr

-H.O

Rearrangements may also proceed via electrophilic, nucleophilic
or radical intermediates and can involve either the mere migration of
a functional group (p. 86) as in the allylic system


\



OH
He

CH=CH, CH^CH,

+ HaO

\c


CH—CH 2.

CH—CHa—OH + H®

or the actual rearrangement of the carbon skeleton of a compound as
in the pinacol (XLII) ->pinacolone (XLI1I) change (p. 90):

Me 2 C—CMe 2
I I
OH OH


Me 3 CCOMe

(XLIII)
(XLII)

the carbonyl group in simple aldehydes and ketones are usually
nucleophilic in character (p. 158). An example is the base-catalysed
formation of cyanhydrins in liquid HCN:

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