Advices For Studying Organic Chemistry

(Wang) #1
by the pair of electrons with which it migrates. It never leaves the carbon
skeleton.


  1. There two ways to remove a proton from the carbocation:

    1. Path (b) leads to the highly stable tetrasubstituted alkene, and this is the path
      followed by most of the carbocations.

    2. Path (a) leads to a less stable, disubstituted alkene and produces the minor
      product of the reaction.

    3. The formation of the more stable alkene is the general rule (Zaitsev’s rule) in
      the acid-catalyzed dehydration reactions of alcohols.
      Step 4




A −

(a)

A

H

(a)

Less stable
alkene

More stable
alkene

(minor product)

(major product)

CH 2 C C CH^3 + H
H 3 C

H

CH 3

+

(b)

(b)
H 3 C
CH 3

C

CCH 3

CH 3

H 2 C
CH 3

CCC H 3

CH 3


  1. Rearrangements occur almost invariably when the migration of an alkanide
    ion or hydride ion can lead to a more stable carbocation.


H 3 C CCC H^3

CH 3
CH 3
H 3 C
H

+

2 o carbocation

methanide
migration H^3 C C

C CH 3
H 3 C
H

+

3 o carbocation^

H 3 C CCC H^3

H
H
H 3 C
H

+

2 o carbocation

hydride
migration H^3 C C

C CH 3
H 3 C
H

+

3 o carbocation^
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