654 CHAPTER 16 Reactions of Substituted Benzenes
Electron-withdrawing substituents
increase the reactivity of the benzene
ring toward nucleophilic substitution
and decrease the reactivity of the
benzene ring toward electrophilic
substitution.
Notice also that the strongly electron-withdrawing substituents that activatethe
benzene ring toward nucleophilic aromatic substitutionreactions are the same sub-
stituents that deactivatethe ring toward electrophilic aromatic substitution. In other
words, making the ring less electron rich makes it easier for a nucleophile—but more
difficult for an electrophile—to approach the ring. Thus, any substituent that deacti-
vates the benzene ring toward electrophilic substitution activates it toward nucleo-
philic substitution and vice versa.
Nucleophilic aromatic substitution takes place by a two-step reaction known as an
reaction(substitution nucleophilic aromatic). In the first step, the nucleophile
attacks the carbon bearing the leaving group from a trajectory that is nearly perpendic-
ular to the aromatic ring. (Recall from Section 10.8 that leaving groups cannot be
displaced from carbon atoms by back-side attack.) Nucleophilic attack forms a
resonance-stabilized carbanion intermediate called a Meisenheimer complex, after
Jakob Meisenheimer (1876–1934). In the second step of the reaction, the leaving
group departs, reestablishing the aromaticity of the ring.In a nucleophilic aromatic substitution reaction, the incoming nucleophile must be a
stronger base than the substituent that is being replaced, because the weaker of the two
bases will be the one eliminated from the intermediate.
The electron-withdrawing substituent must be ortho or para to the site of nucleo-
philic attack because the electrons of the attacking nucleophile can be delocalized onto
the substituent only if the substituent is in one of those positions.A variety of substituents can be placed on a benzene ring by means of nucleophilic
aromatic substitution reactions. The only requirement is that the incoming group be a
stronger base than the group that is being replaced.ClN++HO−Cl+−OO O−ON+
HO−electrons are delocalized
onto the NO 2 groupsp^2SNAr3-D Molecule:
para-FluoronitrobenzeneXNO 2 NO 2YN NO 2X Y+ Y− + X−−−−
− N NO^2
−O + O OO+ −slowgeneral mechanism for nucleophilic aromatic substitutionfastX Y X Y X YFNO 2∆
+ CH 3 O−∆ HO−
++CH 3 CH 2 NH 2 H 2 OOCH 3NO 2+ F−BrNO 2NH 2 CH 2 CH 3 Br−NO 2NHCH 2 CH 3NO 2NO 2+p-fluoronitrobenzeneN-ethyl-2,4-dinitro-
anilinep-nitroanisole1-bromo-2,4-dinitrobenzeneNO 2 NO 2