Have you ever wondered what the chemical structure of coolant is, or even of some anaesthetics that are used when you have to have a wisdom tooth removed, or have an operation on your kneecap? Well, these chemical compounds that we use every day are halogenoarenes. Read on to find out more about them.
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Jetzt kostenlos anmeldenHave you ever wondered what the chemical structure of coolant is, or even of some anaesthetics that are used when you have to have a wisdom tooth removed, or have an operation on your kneecap? Well, these chemical compounds that we use every day are halogenoarenes. Read on to find out more about them.
Before we talk about aryl halides, also known as halogenoarenes, let's talk about arenes.
Arenes are hydrocarbons which have benzene as a structural unit. Arenes are also called aromatic hydrocarbons.
So, benzene forms the base for all arenes. Benzene is a cyclic hydrocarbon of 6 carbon atoms, with alternating double and single bonds between carbon atoms.
The structure can also be drawn as a hexagon with a circle inside to represent the alternating double bonds. The structural formula of benzene is C6H6.
Benzene has a very large role in industrial manufacturing. It is used to synthesise chemicals that make dyes, resins, plastics, synthetic fibres, rubber, detergents. It is also used in the manufacture of drugs and pesticides.
Now that you know what arenes are, you can probably guess what halogenoarenes are.
Halogenoarenes are formed when one hydrogen atom in a benzene ring is substituted with a halogen atom. Halogenoarenes are also called aryl halides.
The general formula of aryl halide is C6H5X, where X is a halide atom.
For example, structural formula of aryl chloride is C6H5Cl. Another name for aryl chloride is chlorobenzene. The names of other aryl halides are similar.
Aryl halides are most commonly prepared using these two methods -
Let us go through them in detail.
This is the simplest and the oldest method of synthesising aryl halides. In this process, benzene is reacted with a halogen gas in the presence of the aluminium salt of the halogen. The halogen substitutes a hydrogen atom on the benzene ring.
The sandmeyer reaction is used to synthesise halogenoarenes from diazonium salts. A diazonium salt is reacted with a copper salt or potassium salt to get the aryl halide with the required halogen.
The first step involves the formation of a diazonium salt by reacting aniline with nitrous acid at a low temperature.
Now, the diazonium salt is reacted with copper (I) chloride, or copper (I) bromide, or potassium iodide. The copper or potassium salt is chosen depending on which aryl halide is to be made. Nitrogen gas is released as a byproduct of this reaction.
Let us see some typical reactions of aryl halides.
When reacted with magnesium in the presence of ether, halogenoarenes form Grignard reagents.
In the example above, the Grignard reagent formed is phenylmagnesium bromide.
In terms of nucleophilic substitution reactions, aryl halides are rather unreactive. There are various causes for this lack of reaction.
In organic chemistry, SNAR reactions are nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions. In these reactions, a nucleophile displaces a leaving group (ex - a halide) on an aromatic ring. When strong electron-withdrawing groups (deactivating groups) are ortho or para to the carbon atom that is linked to the halogen in aryl halides, they can undergo a nucleophilic substitution process. The carbon atom is vulnerable to a nucleophilic attack due to this configuration.
The following two examples show nucleophilic substitution on deactivated halogenoarenes.
Addition-elimination reactions are two step reactions in which the first step is an addition reaction, and the second step is elimination, which gives an overall effect of substitution. In general, elimination-addition reactions do not occur in aryl halides. However, high pressure and temperature can be used to drive substitution reactions in halogenoarenes.
When chlorobenzene reacts with sodium hydroxide under high temperature and pressure, it undergoes addition-elimination reaction and converts to sodium phenoxide.
Hydrolysis is the chemical reaction of a compound with water, in which breakdown of both the compound and water takes place. The ease of hydrolysis differs in different compounds. When we compare alkyl chlorides, acyl chlorides, and aryl chlorides, the order of ease of hydrolysis is - Acyl chloride > alkyl chloride > aryl chloride
Aryl chlorides do not undergo hydrolysis. This can be explained by the strength of carbon-chlorine bond.
Hydrolysis of acyl halides is easiest compared to alkyl halides and aryl halides, and can be done at room temperature. This is because the carbon that the halide is attached to, is also attached to an oxygen atom. The oxygen atom and the halide atom are both very electronegative and pull electron away from the carbon atom. As a result, the carbon atom is left very δ+. This makes the C-X bond weak, making it an easy site for a nucleophile to attack.
In alkyl halides, there is only one electronegative atom, the halogen, pulling electrons away from the carbon atom which it is attached to. Therefore, the carbon atom is not as δ+, and the C-X bond is stronger than that in acyl halides. Therefore, hydrolysis of alkyl halides needs to be heated, and also to be refluxed with OH-, which is a stronger nucleophile than H2O.
The C-X bond in aryl halides is the strongest. This is because a lone pair of electrons on the halide atom is part of the delocalized 𝜋-bonding. This results in the C-X bond in developing some double-bond characteristics. Therefore, hydrolysis of aryl halides does not occur.
Let us look at the resonance structures that aryl halides exhibit in the example of aryl chloride.
As you can see in the resonance structures diagram, 3 out of 4 resonance structures have a double bond between the carbon atom and the chlorine atom. Therefore, in the hybrid structure, there are some double bond characteristics in the C-X bond.
Aryl fluoride and aryl chloride are 2 examples of aryl halides.
The general formula of aryl halide is C6H5X, where X is a halide atom.
Aryl halides are most commonly prepared using these two methods -
Aryl halides are aromatic hydrocarbons. An aryl halide is formed when a hydrogen atom in a benzene ring is replaced by a halogen atom.
An acyl group is a chain of the formula RC(O)- attached to a hydrocarbon compound (R is any hydrocarbon chain).
An aryl group is an aromatic chain attached to a hydrocarbon compound.
What are arenes?
Arenes are compounds which have benzene as a structural unit.
What is the structural formula of benzene?
C6H6
What are halogenarenes?
Halogenarenes are aromatic compounds. They are formed when a hydrogena tom in benzene is replaced with a halogen atom.
What is another name for halogenarenes?
Aryl halides
What is the structural formula of aryl halides?
C6H5X, where X is a halogen atom.
What is the starting compound when making aryl bromide using the halogenation process?
Benzene
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