Chemistry, asked by mukulkum0121gmailcom, 1 year ago

HERE IS MY QUESTION WHAT ARE sn1 and sn2 reactions.

Answers

Answered by TEJ1234576
2
ANSWER

SN 1 AND SN 2 REACTION



 The SN1 reaction - A Nucleophilic Substitution in which the Rate Determining Step involves 1 component
. -SN1 reactions are unimolecular, proceeding through an intermediate carbocation.

SN2 is a kind of nucleophilic substitution reaction mechanism. Since two reacting species are involved in the slow step, this leads to the term substitution nucleophilic

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mukulkum0121gmailcom: defenition of sn1 is given in sn2 and vice versa
Answered by RakeshPateL555
0
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( for mechanism of sn2 see attached file 1)

♦♦♦• Reaction is:

Stereospecific (Walden Inversion of configuration)

Concerted - all bonds form and break at same time

Bimolecular - rate depends on concentration of both nucleophile and substrate

♦♦♦• Substrate:

Best if primary (one substituent on carbon bearing leaving group)

works if secondary, fails if tertiary

♦♦♦• Nucleophile:

Best if more reactive (i.e. more anionic or more basic)

♦♦♦• Leaving Group: Best if more stable (i.e. can support negative charge well):

TsO- (very good) > I- > Br- > Cl- > F- (poor)

RF , ROH , ROR , RNH2


♦♦♦• Solvent:

Polar Aprotic (i.e. no OH) is best.

For example dimethylsulfoxide ( CH3 ( HCON(CH3)2 ), acetonitrile ( CH3

Protic solvents (e.g. H2 but can be used in some case are NEVER Substrates for SN2 reactions

Leaving Groups on double-bonded carbons are never replaced by SN2 reactions SOCH3 ), dimethylformamide CN ). O or ROH) deactivate nucleophile by hydrogen bonding


\mathbb{\red{\huge{\:\:\:\:\:SN\:1}}}


( for mechanism of sn1 see attached file 2)

♦♦♦• Reaction is:

Non-stereospecific (attack by nucleophile occurs from both sides)

Non-concerted - has carbocation intermediate

Unimolecular - rate depends on concentration of only the substrate

♦♦♦• Substrate:

Best if tertiary or conjugated (benzylic or allylic) carbocation can be formed as leaving group departs

never primary


♦♦♦• Nucleophile:

Best if more reactive (i.e. more anionic or more basic)

♦♦♦• Leaving Group: Same as SN2

best if more stable (i.e. can support negative charge well)

Examples: TsO- (very good) > I- > Br- > Cl- > F- (poor)

However, tertiary or allylic ROH or ROR' can be reactive under strongly acidic conditions to replace OH or OR

♦♦♦• Solvent:

Same as SN2

Polar Aprotic (i.e. no OH) is best

Examples: dimethylsulfoxide ( CH3 ( HCON(CH3)2 ), acetonitrile ( CH3

Protic solvents (e.g. H2
SOCH3 ), dimethylformamide CN ).
O or ROH) deactivate but can be used in some cases

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