218 CHAPTER 5 Stereochemistry
PROBLEM 40
Compound A has two stereoisomers, but compounds B and C exist as single compounds.
Explain.
5.18 Stereochemistry of Reactions: Regioselective,
Stereoselective, and Stereospecific Reactions
In Chapter 4 we saw that alkenes undergo electrophilic addition reactions, and we
looked at the different kinds of reagents that add to alkenes. We also examined the
step-by-step process by which each reaction occurs (the mechanism of the reaction),
and we determined what products are formed. However, we did not consider the stere-
ochemistry of the reactions.
Stereochemistryis the field of chemistry that deals with the structures of mole-
cules in three dimensions. When we study the stereochemistry of a reaction, we are
concerned with the following questions:
- If a reaction product can exist as two or more stereoisomers, does the reaction
produce a single stereoisomer, a set of particular stereoisomers, or all possible
stereoisomers? - If stereoisomers are possible for the reactant, do all stereoisomers react to form
the same stereoisomeric product, or does each reactant form a different stereo-
isomer or a different set of stereoisomers?
Before we examine the stereochemistry of electrophilic addition reactions, we need
to become familiar with some terms used in describing the stereochemistry of a
reaction.
In Section 4.4 we saw that a regioselective reaction is one in which two
constitutional isomerscan be obtained as products but more of one is obtained than
of the other. In other words, a regioselective reaction selects for a particular consti-
tutional isomer. Recall that a reaction can be moderately regioselective,highly re-
gioselective, or completely regioselectivedepending on the relative amounts of the
constitutional isomers formed in the reaction.
Stereoselectiveis a similar term, but it refers to the preferential formation of a
stereoisomerrather than a constitutional isomer. If a reaction that generates a car-
bon–carbon double bond or an asymmetric carbon in a product forms one stereoiso-
mer preferentially over another, it is a stereoselective reaction. In other words, it
selects for a particular stereoisomer. Depending on the degree of preference for a par-
ticular stereoisomer, a reaction can be described as being moderately stereoselective,
highly stereoselective, or completely stereoselective.
more B is formed than C
a regioselective reaction
constitutional
isomers
ABC+
A
H 3 C
CH 2 CH 3
Cl− Cl−
CH
+
CH 2
N
B
CH
+
CH 2
CH CH 2
N
C
H 3 C
CH 3
H
N
H H 3 C H
A regioselective reaction forms more of
one constitutional isomer than of
another.