Reactions of Halogenoalkanes (Edexcel International AS Chemistry): Revision Note
Halogenoalkanes - Reactions
A nucleophile is an electron-rich species that can donate a pair of electrons
‘Nucleophile’ means ‘nucleus / positive charge loving’ as nucleophiles are attracted to positively charged species
Nucleophilic refers to reactions that involve a nucleophile
Formation of alcohols
The nucleophile in this reaction is the hydroxide ion, OH-
An aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or potassium hydroxide (KOH) with ethanol is used to form an alcohol
This reaction is very slow at room temperature, so the reaction mixture is warmed
This is an example of a hydrolysis reaction and the product is an alcohol
The rate of this reaction depends on the type of halogen in the halogenoalkane
The stronger the C-X bond, the slower the rate of the reaction
In terms of bond enthalpy, C-F > C-Cl > C-Br > C-I
Fluoroalkanes do not react at all, but iodoalkanes have a very fast rate of reaction
The halogen is replaced by the nucleophile, OH-
This reaction could also be done with water as the nucleophile, but it is very slow
The hydroxide ion is a better nucleophile than water as it carries a full negative charge
In water, the oxygen atom only carries a partial charge
A hydroxide ion is a better nucleophile as it has a full formal negative charge whereas the oxygen atom in water only carries a partial negative charge; this causes the nucleophilic substitution reaction with water to be much slower than the aqueous alkali
Reaction with water
The water molecule is a weak nucleophile, but it will eventually substitute for the halogen
This occurs much more slowly compared to when warm aqueous sodium hydroxide is used
An alcohol is produced
RX + H2O → ROH + H+ + X-
CH3CH2Br + H2O → CH3CH2OH + H+ + Br-
If silver nitrate solution in ethanol is added to the solution, the silver ions will react with the halide ions as soon as they form, giving a silver halide precipitate
Ag+ (aq) + X- (aq) → AgX (s)
Formation of nitriles
The nucleophile in this reaction is the cyanide ion, CN-
An ethanolic solution of potassium cyanide (KCN in ethanol) is heated under reflux with the halogenoalkane
The product is a nitrile
E.g. bromoethane is heated under reflux with ethanolic potassium cyanide to form propanenitrile
The halogen is replaced by a cyanide group, CN -
The nucleophilic substitution of halogenoalkanes with KCN adds an extends the carbon chain by adding an extra carbon atom
This reaction can therefore be used by chemists to make a compound with one more carbon atom than the best available organic starting material
Formation of primary amines by reaction with ammonia
The nucleophile in this reaction is the ammonia molecule, NH3
An ethanolic solution of excess ammonia (NH3 in ethanol) is heated under pressure with a primary halogenoalkane
An excess of ammonia is used because the product is more reactive than ammonia so further substitution reactions could occur
The product is a primary amine
E.g. bromoethane reacts with excess ethanolic ammonia when heated under pressure to form ethylamine
The halogen is replaced by an amine group, NH2
Formation of alkenes
The halogenoalkanes are heated with ethanolic sodium hydroxide causing the C-X bond to break heterolytically, forming an X- ion and leaving an alkene as an organic product
E.g. bromoethane is heated with ethanolic sodium hydroxide to form ethene
Production of an alkene from a halogenoalkane by reacting it with ethanolic sodium hydroxide and heating it
Hydrogen bromide is eliminated to form ethene
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