CHEM10006 Lecture Notes - Lecture 27: Thionyl Chloride, Carbonyl Group, Nucleophilic Addition

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Carbonyl group is polar, thus acts as an electrophile rather than a nucleophile like alkenes. The double bond is composed of a sigma and pi bond, and in the reaction = breaking of the pi bonds and thus a hybridization change. Electrophilic carbon, so neutrophils will attack carbon in a carbonyl as opposed to electrophiles attacking the carbon in alkenes. Aldehydes (gentler conditions), carboxylic acids (harsher conditions) and ketones can be formed via oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols. Do(cid:374)"t (cid:374)eed to k(cid:374)ow (cid:373)e(cid:272)ha(cid:374)is(cid:373)s, just (cid:374)eed to k(cid:374)ow it"s the (cid:374)ature of the (cid:272)ar(cid:271)o(cid:374) a(cid:374)d what softer/harder reagents form. Nucleophilic addition reactions (reduction) aldehydes and ketones. Polar bond so nucleophiles want to attack electrophiles. Hydride attacks carbon to form alkoxide (initial species) and then an acid base reaction occurs to produce an alcohol (2 steps split hydrogen into h- and h+, then adding h-, and then adding h+)

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