Anmelden

In organic synthesis, the formation of products can be altered by changing the reaction conditions. For example, a dibromo addition product is formedwhen propene is treated with bromine at room temperature. In contrast, propene undergoes allylic substitution in non-polar solvents at high temperaturesto give 3-bromopropene. In order to avoid the addition reaction, the bromine concentration must be kept as low as possible throughout the reaction. This can be achieved using N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) as a reagent instead of molecular bromine.

Propene reacts with NBS in the presence of light or peroxide via radical substitution to form allyl bromide or 3-bromopropene. Similar to radical reactions, the allylic bromination mechanism involves three steps: initiation, propagation, and termination. In the initiation step, NBS undergoes homolytic cleavage of weak N–Br bonds in the presence of light or peroxide to form bromine radical. During the first propagation step, the generated bromine radical abstracts the allylic hydrogen to give resonance stabilized allylic radical and HBr. The formed HBr immediately reacts with NBS in an ionic reaction producing Br2, which participates in the second propagation step. Eventually, in the termination step, different radicals combine, which results in the formation of nonradical products leading to the termination of the reaction. Throughout the reaction, HBr and Br2 concentrations are kept at a minimum. Under these conditions, that is, in a non-polar solvent with a very low concentration of bromine, the ionic addition of Br2 does not successfully compete with radical bromination.

Radical bromination of allylic substituted alkenes forms a mixture of products. This is because of the resonance stabilization of formed allylic radical intermediate, which can abstract halogen from either site (Figure 1).

Figure1

Tags

Radical SubstitutionAllylic BrominationOrganic SynthesisDibromo AdditionPropeneN bromosuccinimide NBSBromine RadicalInitiationPropagationTerminationAllyl BromideResonance StabilizationHalogen Abstraction

Aus Kapitel 20:

article

Now Playing

20.20 : Radikalische Substitution: Allylische Bromierung

Radikalchemie

4.6K Ansichten

article

20.1 : Radikale: Elektronenstruktur und geometrie

Radikalchemie

3.8K Ansichten

article

20.2 : Paramagnetische Elektronenresonanz (EPR) Spektroskopie: Organische Radikale

Radikalchemie

2.3K Ansichten

article

20.3 : Bildung von Radikalen: Überblick

Radikalchemie

2.0K Ansichten

article

20.4 : Bildung von Radikalen: Homolyse

Radikalchemie

3.3K Ansichten

article

20.5 : Bildung von Radikalen: Abstraktion

Radikalchemie

3.3K Ansichten

article

20.6 : Bildung von Radikalen: Addition

Radikalchemie

1.6K Ansichten

article

20.7 : Bildung von Radikalen: Eliminierung

Radikalchemie

1.6K Ansichten

article

20.8 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Überblick

Radikalchemie

1.9K Ansichten

article

20.9 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Sterische Effekte

Radikalchemie

1.8K Ansichten

article

20.10 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Konzentrationseffekte

Radikalchemie

1.5K Ansichten

article

20.11 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Elektrophile Radikale

Radikalchemie

1.8K Ansichten

article

20.12 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Nukleophile Radikale

Radikalchemie

2.0K Ansichten

article

20.13 : Radikal-Reaktivität: Intramolekular vs Intermolekular

Radikalchemie

1.7K Ansichten

article

20.14 : Radikalische Autoxidation

Radikalchemie

2.1K Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten