Chemistry, asked by jayant79218, 9 months ago

ethyne in addition with hydrogen form ethane in presence of palladium catalyst but if reaction is carried in the presence of barium sulphide and quinidine, the product is ethene and not ethene. why?​

Answers

Answered by salauddinmohammed551
0

the answer is hydride oxygen and netron

Answered by smartbrainz
0

This is a type of addition reaction that takes place in case of the alkyne.

Explanation:

  • the addition reaction takes place in a different process in case of palladium catalyst and in the presence of barium sulphide and  quinidine
  • the palladium catalyst helps in the complete addition of hydrogen in ethyne and as a result of this there is formation of ethane and there is no unsaturation present in the compound. However barium sulfide and quinidine helps in in partial oxidation and addition of only two hydrogen as a result of which it causes partial hydrogenation

to know more about addition reaction in alkyne,

Why alkynes are more reactive than alkenes for nucleophilic ...

https://brainly.in/question/6663951

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