Electrophilic addition of halogens to alkenes proceeds via a cyclic halonium ion to form a 1,2-dihalide or a vicinal dihalide.
Conjugated dienes react with halogens in a similar manner. However, in addition to the 1,2-dihalide, they also form a 1,4-dihalide. The mechanism involves two steps.
First, a nucleophilic attack by one of the diene π bonds on the electrophilic center of the polarized halogen molecule forms a halonium ion intermediate. This is followed by a nucleophilic attack of the displaced halide ion at C2 of the intermediate to give the 1,2-product or at C4 to form the 1,4-addition product. The ratio of the products formed depends on the reaction temperature. Low temperature favors the 1,2-product, whereas high temperature favors the 1,4-product.
From Chapter 16:
Now Playing
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.1K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.9K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.9K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
6.6K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
3.7K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
3.0K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
3.4K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.2K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
5.9K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
20.6K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
4.4K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.1K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
1.7K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
1.6K Views
Dienes, Conjugated Pi Systems, and Pericyclic Reactions
2.2K Views
See More
ABOUT JoVE
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved