Section 12.11 Organometallic Compounds 467
Table 12.3 The Electronegativities of Some of the Elementsa
aFrom the scale devised by Linus Pauling
IA IIA IB IIB IIIA IVA VA VIA VIIA
H
2.1
Li
1.0
Na
0.9
K
0.8
Be
1.5
Mg
1.2
B
2.0
Al
1.5
C
2.5
Si
1.8
N
3.0
P
2.1
O
3.5
S
2.5
F
4.0
Cl
3.0
Br
2.8
I
2.5
Ca
1.0
Cu
1.8
Ag
1.4
Cd
1.5
Hg
1.5
Zn
1.7
Ga
1.8
Sn
1.7
Pb
1.6
Ge
2.0
3-D Molecules:
Chlorobenzene;
Phenyllithium
Organolithium compoundsare prepared by adding lithium to an alkyl halide in a
nonpolar solvent such as hexane.
Organomagnesium compounds, frequently called Grignard reagentsafter their
discoverer, are prepared by adding an alkyl halide to magnesium shavings being
stirred in anhydrous diethyl ether or THF. The magnesium is inserted between the
carbon and the halogen.
The solvent (usually diethyl ether or tetrahydrofuran) plays a crucial role in the
formation of a Grignard reagent. Because the magnesium atom of a Grignard reagent is
surrounded by only four electrons, it needs two more pairs of electrons to form an octet.
Solvent molecules provide these electrons by coordinating (supplying electron pairs) to
the metal. Coordination allows the Grignard reagent to dissolve in the solvent and
prevents it from coating the magnesium shavings, which would make them unreactive.
The organometallic compounds form when the metal (Li or Mg) donates its valence
electrons to the partially positively charged carbon of the alkyl halide.
CH 3 CH 2 + 2 Li
δ− δ+
Br CH 3 CH 2 Li + Li+Br−
CH 3 CH 2 + Mg
δ− δ+
δ+ δ−
δ+ δ−
Br CH 3 CH 2 MgBr
cyclohexyl
bromide
cyclohexylmagnesium
bromide
diethyl ether
THF
vinyl
bromide
CH 2 CHBr
vinylmagnesium
bromide
+ Mg CH 2 CHMgBr
Br + Mg MgBr
hexane
1-bromobutane butyllithium
chlorobenzene phenyllithium
CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 Br
hexane
+ 2 Li
Cl + 2 Li Li + LiCl
CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 Li + LiBr
BRUI12-437_480r3 27-03-2003 11:51 AM Page 467