Iniciar sesión

Typically, when alkenes react with halogens at low temperatures, an addition reaction occurs. However, upon increasing the temperature or under reaction conditions that form radicals, providing a low but steady concentration of halogen radicals, allylic substitution reaction is favored. This is because allylic hydrogens are very reactive as the formed intermediate is resonance stabilized. For example, when propene is treated with chlorine in the gas phase at 400 °C, it undergoes allylic chlorination, forming 3‐chloropropene.

The radical substitution reaction of allylic chlorination follows a chain mechanism similar to alkane halogenations and involves initiation, propagation, and termination steps. The initiation step involves the dissociation of the chlorine molecule into two chlorine atoms. The propagation step involves two chain-propagation steps. In the first chain-propagation step, the chlorine atom abstracts the allylic hydrogen atom, forming a resonance stabilized allylic‐radical intermediate. In the second chain-propagation step, the allyl radical intermediate reacts with a chlorine molecule, forming an allyl chloride and a chlorine atom. The chlorine atom formed in the second chain-propagation step further abstracts allylic hydrogen and propagates the reaction. In the termination step, the radicals react with each other to form non-radical products and stop the reaction.

Tags

Radical SubstitutionAllylic ChlorinationAlkenesHalogensAddition ReactionResonance StabilizationChain MechanismInitiation StepPropagation StepTermination StepChlorine MoleculeAllylic Radical IntermediateAllyl Chloride

Del capítulo 20:

article

Now Playing

20.19 : Radical Substitution: Allylic Chlorination

Radical Chemistry

2.1K Vistas

article

20.1 : Radicales: Estructura Electrónica y Geometría

Radical Chemistry

3.8K Vistas

article

20.2 : Espectroscopía de Resonancia Paramagnética Electrónica (EPR): Radicales Orgánicos

Radical Chemistry

2.3K Vistas

article

20.3 : Formación Radical: Visión General

Radical Chemistry

2.0K Vistas

article

20.4 : Formación de radicales: homólisis

Radical Chemistry

3.3K Vistas

article

20.5 : Formación Radical: Abstracción

Radical Chemistry

3.3K Vistas

article

20.6 : Formación de radicales: Adición

Radical Chemistry

1.6K Vistas

article

20.7 : Formación de Radicales: Eliminación

Radical Chemistry

1.6K Vistas

article

20.8 : Reactividad radical: Visión general

Radical Chemistry

1.9K Vistas

article

20.9 : Reactividad radical: efectos estéricos

Radical Chemistry

1.8K Vistas

article

20.10 : Reactividad de radicales: efectos de concentración

Radical Chemistry

1.5K Vistas

article

20.11 : Reactividad de radicales: radicales electrofílicos

Radical Chemistry

1.8K Vistas

article

20.12 : Reactividad de radicales: radicales nucleofílicos

Radical Chemistry

2.0K Vistas

article

20.13 : Reactividad de radicales: intramolecular vs intermolecular

Radical Chemistry

1.7K Vistas

article

20.14 : Autoxidación radical

Radical Chemistry

2.1K Vistas

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados