Finkelstein is conveniently used to prepare ???
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Answer:
Two essential concepts for students to grasp in the undergraduate organic chemistry sequence are substitution chemistry and elimination chemistry (SN1/SN2 and E1/E2). However, students are often confounded by the seemingly endless series of structure–reactivity relationships. This dualistic relationship of conceptual essentialness and student confusion usually results in a line of demarcation for many second-year organic chemistry students. It is at this point that students either pull together the fundamental structure–reactivity relationships and go on to draw relevant mechanistic conclusions that underpin the balance of their organic chemistry experience or the flood of material washes over them and they wind up in a miserable struggle to keep their heads above water until the end of the spring semester. Therefore, we have developed a quantitative kinetics laboratory exercise featuring the Finkelstein reaction (SN2) for use in the first-semester organic chemistry course that utilizes nonaqueous conductivity as the method by which relevant structure–temperature–solvent effects are examined. Keywords (Audience): Second-Year Undergraduate
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