Chemistry, asked by sumitsinghbohrakhati, 6 hours ago

what are reaction intermediates explain the stability of carbo cations and anions on the basis of inductive effect​

Answers

Answered by nagalaxmi7583
0

Answer:

Carbo may be a single atoms or a group of atoms that have net charge on them.

Explanation:

A positively charged carbo is called Cation and A Negatively charged carbo is called Anion.

Answered by Surshti123
0

Stability of carbocation intermediates

The next step in understanding why Markovnikov's rule is often followed in electrophilic additions, involves understanding the structure and stability of the carboncation intermediate formed during the mechanism..

Carbocations Are Stabilized By Neighboring Carbon-Carbon Multiple Bonds. Carbocations adjacent to another carbon-carbon double or triple bond have special stability because overlap between the empty p orbital of the carbocation with the p orbitals of the π bond allows for charge to be shared between multiple atoms.

The polarization of a σ bond due to electron withdrawing or electron donating effect of adjacent groups or atoms is referred to as inductive effect.

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