CHEM 212 Lecture Notes - Nucleophilic Substitution, Sn2 Reaction, Elimination Reaction

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Sn2 and e2 reactions both are favoured by a high concentration of strong nucleophile or base. Substitution occurs when the nucleophile attacks the carbon which has the leaving group. Elimination occurs when the base attacks a -hydrogen. Industries that prefer one reaction over the other often need to control the reaction as to produce the favoured reaction. 1. This experiment is a synthesis by nucleophilic substitution (sn2) since the melting point of the product obtained was fairly close to that of 2-ethoxynaphthalene. Since it was slightly lower and not exact, this indicates slight traces of impurities in the obtained sample. Also the exact amount of 2-naphthol was never given so the percent yield cannot be calculated. Sn2 reaction was favoured because the leaving group was attached to a 2 carbon, and a strong nucleophile, oh-, was used. Also the nucleophile was not bulky, allowing the backside attack of the nucleophile in the sn2 reaction to occur.

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