which type of isomers are formed in rearangement reactions
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Explanation:
Which types of isomers are formed in rearrangement reactions? Explanation: Products formed have the same molecular formula, but their atoms have different arrangements or bonds. For example, Butane and isobutane have the same number of carbon (C) atoms and hydrogen (H) atoms, so their molecular formulas are the same.
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Answer:
Structural Isomers are formed during rearrangement reactions.
Explanation:
- A rearrangement reaction is a broad class of organic reactions in which the carbon skeleton of a molecule is rearranged to yield a structural isomer of the parent molecule.
- Often a substituent moves from one atom to another atom in the same molecule, so these reactions are often intramolecular. Rearrangement is not well represented by simple, discrete electron transfers.
- The actual mechanism of alkyl group movement, as in the Wagner–Meerwein rearrangement, likely involves liquid transfer of the alkyl group moving along a bond, not ionic bond breaking and formation.
- For pericyclic reactions, the explanation in terms of orbital interactions paints a better picture than simple discrete electron transfers.
- However, it is possible to draw the curved arrows for a sequence of discrete electron transfers that give the same result as a rearrangement reaction, although this is not necessarily realistic. In the allylic rearrangement, the reaction is indeed ionic.
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