Relative Rates of Nucleophilic Substitution (HL) (DP IB Chemistry)
Revision Note
Relative Rates of Nucelophilic Substitution
Various factors affect the rate of nucleophilic substitution, regardless of SN1 or SN2, involving a halogenoalkane:
The nature of the nucleophile
The halogen involved (leaving group)
The structure (class) of the halogenoalkane
1. The nature of the nucleophile
The most effective nucleophiles are neutral or negatively charged species that have a lone pair of electrons available to donate to the δ+ carbon in the halogenoalkane
The greater the electron density on the nucleophile ion or molecule; the stronger the nucleophile
Consequently, negative anions tend to be more reactive than their corresponding neutral species, e.g. hydroxide ions and water molecules (as previously discussed)
When nucleophiles have the same charge, the electronegativity of the atom carrying the lone pair becomes the deciding factor
The less electronegative the atom carrying the lone pair; the stronger the nucleophile
For example, ammonia is a stronger electrophile than water because the nitrogen atom in ammonia is less electronegative than the oxygen atom in water
This is because a less electronegative atom has a weaker grip on its lone pair of electrons, which means that they are more available for reaction
The effectiveness of nucleophiles is as follows:
Strongest CN- > OH- > NH3 > H2O Weakest
2. The halogen involved (leaving group)
The halogenoalkanes have different rates of substitution reactions
Since substitution reactions involve breaking the carbon-halogen bond, the bond energies can be used to explain their different reactivities
Approximate Halogenoalkane Bond Energy Table
Bond | Bond Energy / kJ mol-1 |
---|---|
C–F | 492 (strongest bond) |
C–Cl | 324 |
C–Br | 285 |
C–I | 228 (weakest bond) |
The table above shows that the C-I bond requires the least energy to break, i.e. it is the weakest carbon-halogen bond
During substitution reactions, the C-I bond will break heterolytically as follows:
R3C-I + OH- → R3C-OH + I-
The C-F bond, on the other hand, requires the most energy to break and is, therefore, the strongest carbon-halogen bond
Fluoroalkanes will therefore be less likely to undergo substitution reactions
This idea can be confirmed by reacting the product formed by nucleophilic substitution of the halogenoalkane with an aqueous silver nitrate solution
As a halide ion is released, this results in the formation of a precipitate
The rate of formation of these precipitates can also be used to determine the reactivity of the halogenoalkanes
Halogenoalkane Precipitates Table
Halogenoalkane | Precipitate |
---|---|
Chloride | White (silver chloride) |
Bromide | Cream (silver bromide) |
Iodide | Pale yellow (silver iodide) |
The formation of the pale yellow silver iodide is the fastest (fastest nucleophilic substitution reaction) whereas the formation of the silver fluoride is the slowest (slowest nucleophilic substitution reaction)
This confirms that fluoroalkanes are the least reactive and iodoalkanes are the most reactive halogenoalkanes
Diagram to show the relative reactivity of the halogenoalkanes
The trend in reactivity of halogenoalkanes
3. The structure (class) of the halogenoalkane
Tertiary halogenoalkanes undergo SN1 reactions, forming stable tertiary carbocations
Secondary halogenoalkanes undergo a mixture of both SN1 and SN2 reactions depending on their structure
Primary halogenoalkanes undergo SN2 reactions, forming the less stable primary carbocations
This has to do with the positive inductive effect of the alkyl groups attached to the carbon which is bonded to the halogen atom
The alkyl groups push electron density towards the positively charged carbon, reducing the charge density
In tertiary carbocations, there are three alkyl groups stabilising the carbocation
In primary carbocations, there is only one alkyl group
This is why tertiary carbocations are much more stable than primary ones
Primary, secondary and tertiary carbocations
The diagram shows the trend in the stability of primary, secondary and tertiary carbocations
Overall, the structure (class) has a direct effect on the formation of the carbocation and, therefore, the rate-determining step
Consequently, this affects the overall rate of the nucleophilic substitution reaction
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