PROBLEM-SOLVING STRATEGY
A carbeneis an unusual carbon-containing species. It has a carbon with a lone pair of
electrons and an empty orbital. The empty orbital makes the carbene highly reactive. The
simplest carbene, methylene is generated by heating diazomethane. Propose a
mechanism for the following reaction:
The information provided is all you need to write a mechanism. First, because you know
the structure of methylene, you can see that it can be generated by breaking the C N
bond of diazomethane. Second, because methylene has an empty orbital, it is an elec-
trophile and, therefore, will react with ethene (a nucleophile). Now, the question is, What
nucleophile reacts with the other carbon of the alkene? Because you know that cyclo-
propane is the product of the reaction, you also know that the nucleophile must be the lone-
pair electrons of methylene.
(Note:Diazomethane is a gas that must be handled with great care because it is both ex-
plosive and toxic.)
Now continue on to Problem 25.
PROBLEM 25
Propose a mechanism for the following reaction:
4.10 Addition of Radicals • The Relative Stabilities
of Radicals
The addition of HBr to 1-butene forms 2-bromobutane. But what if you wanted to
synthesize 1-bromobutane? The formation of 1-bromobutane requires the anti-
Markovnikov addition of HBr. If an alkyl peroxide (ROOR) is added to the reaction
mixture, the product of the addition reaction will be the desired 1-bromobutane. Thus,
the presence of a peroxide causes the anti-Markovnikovaddition of HBr.
A peroxide reverses the order of addition because it changes the mechanism of the
reaction in a way that causes to be the electrophile. Markovnikov’s rule is not fol-
lowed because it applies only when the electrophile is a hydrogen. The general rule—
that the electrophile adds to the sp^2 carbon bonded to the greater number of
Br–
Br
CH 3 CH 2 CH
1-butene 2-bromobutane
CH 2 + HBr CH 3 CH 2 CHCH 3
CH 3 CH 2 CH
1-butene 1-bromobutane
CH 2 HBr CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 Br
peroxide
+
CCH 2 CHCH 2 OH
CH 3
H 3 C
H 3 C O
CH 2
CH 3 CH 3
H 2 SO 4
CH 2 N 2 +
−
NN
+
CH 2
H 2 CCH 2
sp^2
¬
CH 2
−
NN+ 2
diazomethane
N
+
H 2 CCH 2
∆
(≠CH 2 ),
Section 4.10 Addition of Radicals • The Relative Stabilities of Radicals 167