156 CHAPTER 4 Reactions of Alkenes
Carbocation rearrangements also can occur by ring expansion, another type of
1,2-shift. In the following example, a secondary carbocation is formed initially:Ring expansion leads to a more stable carbocation—it is tertiary rather than secondary,
and a five-membered ring has less angle strain than a four-membered ring (Section 2.11).
In subsequent chapters, you will study other reactions that involve the formation
of carbocation intermediates. Keep in mind that whenever a reaction leads to the
formation of a carbocation, you must check its structure for the possibility of
rearrangement.PROBLEM 13 SOLVEDWhich of the following carbocations would you expect to rearrange?a. c. e.b. d.SOLUTION
a. This carbocation will rearrange because a 1,2-hydride shift will convert a primary car-
bocation into a tertiary carbocation.b. This carbocation will not rearrange because it is tertiary and its stability cannot be im-
proved by a carbocation rearrangement.
c. This carbocation will rearrange because a 1,2-hydride shift will convert a secondary
carbocation into a tertiary carbocation.CH 3 H
++CH 3H CH 2+
+CH 3CH 3 CH 2 C
+HCH 3CH 3
+CH 3CH 3 CHCHCH 3
+CH 3
+CH 2+CHCH 3CH 243 2143CH (^21)
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
H+ + Br−
- CH 3
CH 3
Br
CH 3
4-methyl-1-pentene
CH 3 CHCH 2 CH CH 2 HBr CH 3 CHCH 2 CHCH 3
CH 3 CH 3 CH 3 
CH 3 CHCH 2 CHCH 3
CH 3
Br
CH 3 CHCHCH 2 CH 3
the carbocation does
not rearrange
Br−