Chemistry, asked by psharma78645, 8 months ago

why aldehydes are more reactive the ketone​

Answers

Answered by avman08
1

Answer:

hi here is your answer

Explanation:

Aldehydes are usually more reactive toward nucleophilic substitutions than ketones because of both steric and electronic effects. In aldehydes, the relatively small hydrogen atom is attached to one side of the carbonyl group, while a larger R group is affixed to the other side. In ketones, however, R groups are attached to both sides of the carbonyl group. Thus, steric hindrance is less in aldehydes than in ketones.

Answered by harshu994
1

Answer:

in aldehydes the relatively small hydrogen is attached to the carbonyl group which a large r group is affixed to the other side

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