See image — Haloalkanes and Haloarenes Chemistry Question
Question
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💡 Solution & Explanation
To determine the mechanism for each reaction, we consider: substrate class (primary, secondary, tertiary), nucleophile/base strength, solvent polarity, and temperature. Key principles: - Strong nucleophile/base (NaI, NaCN, NaOCH3) + polar aprotic solvent → S_N2 favored for 1° and 2° substrates. - Strong base (NaOCH3) + protic solvent + secondary substrate → E2 can compete; at higher temps E2 is favored. - Tertiary substrate + strong nucleophile in protic solvent → S_N1 (ionization favored). - Weak nucleophile (HBr/H2O = acidic, protic) + tertiary substrate → S_N1. - Primary substrate + strong nucleophile → S_N2. A. Bromocyclopentane (secondary) + NaI in acetone (polar aprotic), 25°C: - NaI is a good nucleophile (I⁻ is large, polarizable), acetone is polar aprotic → favors S_N2. - Secondary substrate can undergo S_N2 with a good nucleophile in polar aprotic solvent. - Answer: S_N2 → (b) B. Benzyl chloride (primary benzylic) + NaOCH3 in methanol, 50°C: - Benzyl chloride is a primary substrate (benzylic, very reactive toward S_N2). - NaOCH3 is a good nucleophile. - Primary substrate strongly favors S_N2. - Although methanol is protic and NaOCH3 can act as base, primary substrates are poor E2 candidates (less stable alkene). - Answer: S_N2 → (b) C. Chlorocyclohexane (secondary) + NaOCH3 in methanol, 25°C: - NaOCH3 is a strong, bulky base in a protic solvent. - Secondary substrate with a strong base → E2 is favored over S_N2 because methoxide is also a strong base and the substrate is secondary. - Protic solvent (methanol) slightly disfavors S_N2 compared to polar aprotic, and strong base favors elimination. - Answer: E2 → (d) D. (CH3)3C-OH (tertiary alcohol) + HBr 48% in H2O, 25°C: - Tertiary substrate, weak nucleophile environment (acidic aqueous HBr). - Mechanism: protonation of OH, loss of water to form tertiary carbocation, then Br⁻ attacks → S_N1. - Answer: S_N1 → (a) E. (CH3)2CH-Br (isopropyl bromide, secondary) + NaCN in ethanol, 25°C: - CN⁻ is a strong nucleophile but not a strong/bulky base. - Secondary substrate + strong nucleophile (CN⁻) in polar protic solvent (ethanol) at low temperature → S_N2 is favored. - CN⁻ is more nucleophilic than basic, favoring substitution. - Answer: S_N2 → (b) F. 1-bromo-2,2-dimethylcyclopentane (secondary bromide but with gem-dimethyl group adjacent, creating steric hindrance similar to neopentyl systems) + NaCN in ethanol, 25°C: - CN⁻ is a good nucleophile. - The substrate appears to be a secondary cyclopentyl bromide with adjacent quaternary carbon (two methyl groups at C2), making backside attack (S_N2) difficult due to steric hindrance. - However, the answer given is S_N2 (b), indicating that despite some steric bulk, the substrate is treated as a secondary substrate reacting with a strong nucleophile (CN⁻) in conditions favoring S_N2. - The cyclopentyl ring with the neopentyl-like geometry still undergoes S_N2 with CN⁻ as it is a strong nucleophile. - Answer: S_N2 → (b) G. (CH3)2CHCH2CH2-OH (3-methyl-1-butanol, primary alcohol) + HBr 48% in H2O, 50°C: - Primary alcohol reacting with HBr (proton source + Br⁻ nucleophile). - Primary substrate: after protonation of OH, primary carbocation would form — unfavorable for S_N1. - Instead, Br⁻ directly displaces the protonated OH in an S_N2 fashion. - Answer: S_N2 → (b) Therefore, the correct answer is {"A": "B", "B": "B", "C": "D", "D": "A", "E": "B", "F": "B", "G": "B"}.