Section 4.5 Addition of Water and Addition of Alcohols 151Mechanistic Tutorial:
Addition of water to an
alkenePROBLEM 6The addition of HBr to which of the following alkenes is more highly regioselective?a. b.4.5 Addition of Water and Addition of Alcohols
Addition of Water
When water is added to an alkene, no reaction takes place, because there is no elec-
trophile present to start a reaction by adding to the nucleophilic alkene. The O H
bonds of water are too strong—water is too weakly acidic—to allow the hydrogen to
act as an electrophile for this reaction.
If, however, an acid (e.g., or HCl) is added to the solution, a reaction will occur
because the acid provides an electrophile. The product of the reaction is an alcohol.
The addition of water to a molecule is called hydration, so we can say that an alkene
will be hydratedin the presence of water and acid.
and HCl are strong acids, so they dissociate al-
most completely in an aqueous solution (Section 1.17). The acid that participates in
the reaction, therefore, is most apt to be a hydronium ion
The first two steps of the mechanism for the acid-catalyzed addition of water to an
alkene are essentially the same as the two steps of the mechanism for the addition of a hy-
drogen halide to an alkene: The electrophile adds to the carbon that is bonded to
the greater number of hydrogens, and the nucleophile (H 2 O)adds to the other sp^2 carbon.
(H+) sp^2hydronium ionH 2 SO 4 ++H 2 OH 3 O+ HSO 4 –(H 3 O+).H 2 SO 4 1 pKa=- 52 1 pKa=- 722-propanolOH HCH 3 CH CH 2 + H 2 O CH 3 CH CH 2H+H 2 SO 4CH 3 CH CH 2 + H 2 O no reaction¬CH 2 CH 3CH 3 CH 2 CCH 2 or orCH 3CHCH 3CH 3CH 3 CCH 3 CH CH 2 + HOH CH 3 CHCH 3 + H 2 OCH 3 CHCH 3OHHHslow fastfastH 2 OCH 3 CHCH 3 + H 3 OOH+++ +mechanism for the acid-catalyzed addition of wateraddition of
the electrophileaddition of
the nucleophilea protonated
alcoholH 2 O removes a
proton, regenerating
the acid catalystan alcohol