Chemistry, asked by Masuka7883, 10 months ago

The halogen compound which undergoes nucleophilic substitution most readily is

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

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These species can react with alkyl halides ( hydrocarbons with halide groups) to undergo a nucleophilic substitution reaction.

Answered by amardeeppsingh176
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Introduction:

The nucleophilic substitution reaction occurs when a more reactive nucleophile knocks out a less reactive nucleophile and takes its place. The nucleophilic substitution process is influenced by a number of parameters, including the nucleophile's basicity, electronegativity, ring substituents, and nucleophile strength. The rate of reaction is affected by the electron-withdrawing or electron-donating groups.

Explanation:

The Following compound of $$\mathrm{CH}_{2}=\mathrm{CHCH}_{2} \mathrm{Cl}$$ (allyl chloride) is the most receptive.

As a response, it will quickly undergo nucleophilic substitution.

The carbocation intermediate is stabilized by resonance when it loses a chloride ion.

$$\mathrm{CH}_{2}=\mathrm{CH}-\mathrm{CH}_{2}^{+} \leftarrow{ }^{+} \mathrm{CH}_{2}-\mathrm{CH}+\mathrm{CH}_{2}$$

Therefore, the nucleophilic substitution of $$\mathrm{CH}_{2}=\mathrm{CHCH}_{2} \mathrm{Cl}$$ is the most common.

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