an aryl group is a functional group derived from a simple aromatic ring where one hydrogen atom is removed from the ring (C6H5)
a pi system is a system of connected p orbitals with delocalised electrons in a molecule, which lowers the overall energy of the molecule and increases its stability, the pi electrons do not belong to a single bond or atom but rather to a group of atoms
an electrophile is a species that accepts a pair of electrons in a mechanism step
electrophilic substitution is a chemical reaction in which an electrophile displaces a functional group in a compound, typically a hydrogen atom in a benzene ring
halogen carriers are halogen compounds used during the halogenation , alkylation and acylation of benzene. they speed up electrophilic reactions by acting as a catalyst
halogen carriers are needed to polarise molecules as benzene is not sufficiently rich in electrons to polarise molecules itself. it does this by pulling off a halogen atom from a molecule generating a positively charged electrophile
an acyl group is a specific type of carbonyl group with a R group connected to the carbonyl
a nitronium ion is a strong electrophile that is generated when concentrated nitric and sulphuric acids are mixed together and has the formula NO2+
Kekule's model is a model of benzene C6H6, that was proposed in 1865, the carbons are arranged in a hexagon and he suggested alternating single and double bonds
a directing effect is the fact that some groups attached to a benzene ring control whereabouts on the ring electrophilic substitution occurs
an OH group has a directing effect on the 2 and 4 positions of a benzene ring
a NO2 group has a directing effect in the 3 position on a benzene ring
benzene is a colourless, planar and hexagonal shaped molecule
arenes general formula is CnHn
arenes empirical formula is always CH
evidence to prove that Kekule's model is inaccurate:
chemical reaction with bromine
thermochemical data (enthalpy of hydrogenation)
bond length data
benzene does not decolourise bromine water so it cannot be a triene (3 double bonds) like Kekule suggested as carbon double bonds cause bromine water to decolourise.
hydrogenation of benzene is less exothermic than than the calculated value for Kekule's model
the enthalpy change of hydrogenation of Kekule's model is -378 kJ/mol
the enthalpy change of hydrogenation of benzene is -208 kJ/mol
the differences between the enthalpy change of hydrogenation of Kekule's model and benzene is the enthalpy of stabilisation which is -170 kJ/mol
x-ray diffraction crystallography can be used to give bond length data
a C=C has a bond length of 0.134 nm
a C-C bond has a bond length of 0.154 nm
the actual bond length of benzene is 139 pm which is between C-C and C=C
all the bonds in benzene are the same length so Kekule's model cannot be correct as there cannot be alternating single and double bonds as they are different lengths
in benzene the carbon atoms in the ring are bonded to each other and their hydrogen atoms with sigma bonds, each carbon atom has one electron left in its p orbital
in benzene the p orbitals overlap sideways to form a pi system which spreads over all 6 carbon atoms this makes the electrons delocalised. this delocalisation gives benzene its extra stability as electrons tend to repel one another so a system in which they are far apart from one another as possible will give benzene the greatest stability
to achieve maximum overlap of p orbitals the molecule must be planar and the pi system means there is a high region of electron density above and below the ring which can attract electrophiles
the addition reaction of bromine to cyclohexene readily occurs and it causes bromine water to be decolourised
the addition reaction of bromine to benzene is very difficult as the pi system is very stable and requires too much energy to breaks so it undergoes electrophilic substitution
steps of electrophilic substitution with benzene:
generation of electrophile
electrophile attaches to benzene which forms an intermediate ion
H+ is lost from the intermediate and the delocalised pi ring system is reformed
regeneration of the catalyst
the generation of an electrophile for electrophilic substitution with benzene requires a catalyst called a halogen carrier
to polarise benzene a full positive charge is needed rather than a partial charge as a result of an induced dipole, a partial charge is not strong enough to polarise the benzene ring
3 types of electrophilic substitution with benzene: