Chemistry, asked by tyu39990, 2 days ago

Acetylne forms metal acetylide but dimethyl acetylene does not form why?


please explain it with figure !!! in clear manner ❤️
I will mark as brainlliest.
please do it in copy​

Answers

Answered by sweethag1234
0

Answer:

this is the correct answer of this ur question pls make me the brainlest answer

Attachments:
Answered by syed2020ashaels
0

Answer:

Given below is the answer

Explanation:

Metal acetylides are formed by acetylene, but dimethyl acetylene does not because it lacks hydrogen.

The justification for the response is

Acetylene generates an acetylide when it reacts with ammoniacal silver nitrate solution, ammoniacal cuprous chloride solution, or sodamide.

Acidic hydrogens are present in acetylides. It implies that the carbon nucleus will more tightly hold the electrons of the C-H bond in 1-alkynes and that hydrogen will be simple to remove as a proton.

The carbides that are made with acetylene are known as acetylides.

The two most significant reactions of alkynes are deprotonation and substitution reactions (SN2) of acetylides.

A "terminal alkyne" (an alkyne with a C-H bond at the end) will deprotonate to generate its conjugate base, known as a "acetylide," when exposed to a potent base like NaNH2.

We can create new carbon-carbon bonds with the help of these acetylides in SN2 reactions with primary alkyl halides.

Since this is one among the first methods we learn to construct longer carbon chains, it becomes crucial to understand this reaction while addressing synthesis challenges.

See more:

https://brainly.in/question/7208504

#SPJ3

Similar questions