Section 16.4 The Effect of Substituents on Orientation 635
3-D Molecules:
Toluene;
Bromobenzene
All activating substituents are
ortho–para directors.
The weakly deactivating halogens are
ortho–para directors.
16.4 The Effect of Substituents on Orientation
When a substituted benzene undergoes an electrophilic substitution reaction, where
does the new substituent attach itself? Is the product of the reaction the ortho isomer,
the meta isomer, or the para isomer?
The substituent already attached to the benzene ring determines the location of the
new substituent. There are two possibilities: A substituent will direct an incoming sub-
stituent either to the ortho andpara positions, or it will direct an incoming substituent
to the meta position. All activating substituents and the weakly deactivating halogens
are ortho–para directors, and all substituents that are more deactivating than the
halogens are meta directors. Thus, the substituents can be divided into three groups:
- All activating substituents direct an incoming electrophile to the ortho and para
positions. - The weakly deactivating halogens also direct an incoming electrophile to the
ortho and para positions. - All moderately deactivating and strongly deactivating substituents direct an in-
coming electrophile to the meta position.
nitrobenzene m-bromonitrobenzene
FeBr 3
+ Br 2
NO 2 NO 2
Br
m-nitroacetophenone
acetophenone
H 2 SO 4
+ HNO 3
C
O
CH 3
C
O
CH 3
NO 2
p-bromochlorobenzene
bromobenzene o-bromochlorobenzene
FeCl 3
++Cl 2
Br Br Br
Cl
Cl
p-bromotoluene
toluene o-bromotoluene
FeBr 3
++Br 2
CH 3 CH 3 CH 3
Br
Br
ortho isomer meta isomer para isomer
+ Y+ or or
XX
Y
X
Y
X
Y
All deactivating substituents (except the
halogens) are meta directors.