Homolytic Fission (DP IB Chemistry)
Revision Note
Homolytic Fission
In a reaction mechanism, curly arrows show the movement of electrons
A single-headed curly arrow shows the movement of a single electron
These arrows can be called single barbed arrows, fish-hook arrows or half-curly arrows
What is homolytic fission?
Homolytic fission is breaking a covalent bond in such a way that each atom takes an electron from the bond to form two radicals
Remember: A radical is a chemical species that contains an unpaired electron
The homolytic fission of halogens is the initiation step (first step) in a sequence of steps that form a chain reaction
Homolytic fission of a chlorine-chlorine bond
The covalent bond breaks evenly and each chlorine atom receives one electron resulting in the formation of two chlorine radicals, Cl•
The mechanism of homolytic fission can also be represented using Lewis formulas:
Mechanism of homolytic fission using Lewis formulas
The mechanism of homolytic fission using Lewis formulas shows the specific movement of electrons
When drawing mechanisms, ensure:
That the curly arrows start at an electron-rich region
In this case, the curly arrows should start from the middle of the covalent bond
That the curly arrows finish at their correct destination
In this case, each curly arrow should finish at a chlorine atom
Types of homolytic fission
Since bond breaking is an endothermic process, energy is required for homolytic fission to occur
The amount of energy required depends on the strength of the covalent bond being broken
Thermolytic fission: For weaker bonds, simply heating the compound could provide sufficient energy
XX X• + X•
Photolytic fission: For stronger bonds such as halogen bonds, exposing the compound to high-energy UV light provides the required energy
XX X• + X•
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