CH-2230 Chapter Notes - Chapter 10: Protonation, Nucleophile, Substitution Reaction

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23 Oct 2017
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The bond between the carbon and leaving group is super weak and can be broken fairly easily. How to convert oh into a weak base. Protonate the oh group before it undergoes the substitution rxn. Done by conducting the reaction in an acidic solution/hydrogen halide. When protonation occurs the atom left becomes the nucleophile for the substitution reaction. Cant use strong base as a nucleophile here. In normal sn2 reaction = the strongest base is a nucleophile. The strong base would become protonated by acidic solution. The nucleophile comes in and forms bond with carbocation. Remember: sn1 will 9/10 undergo rxn with tertiary alcohol. More stable for rxn to go forth with tertiary carbocation. To undergo sn1 with secondary alcohol heat would have to be added. Side note: little bit of elimination product will form as well as substitution product. Carbocation rearrangements will occur if it leads to formation of more stable carbocation.

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