Community Contributions - Articles by goIITians
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| very important note on benzene |
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Aromatic Compounds Aromaticity - pleasant odor
- unusually low reactivity
- substitution, not addition - unusually stable
- characteristic ring structurewith delocalized pi bonding
Benzene - stability - C6H6 (1,3,5-cyclohexatriene ?)
- no typical C=C reactions
unreactive with HX, X2, KMnO4 - reaction requires extreme conditions
- when reaction does occur, it is substitution not addition
Benzene - structure - all C are sp2 (trigonal, 120° angles)
ideal for a planar hexagon
- all C-C bonds are the same (139 pm)
- compare C-C (154 pm), C=C (134 pm)
- cyclic conjugated pi bonds are unusually stable (resonance)
Nomenclature of Aromatics - monosubstituted benzenes:
common names - see Table 5.1 - disubstituted benzenes:
ortho (1,2-), meta (1,3-), para (1,4-) p-nitrobenzoic acid / / / 2-chloro-6-ethylaniline Nomenclature of Aromatics - group names:
phenyl C6H5 benzyl C6H5CH2
 (E)-1-phenyl-1-butene Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution - benzene can be made to react with very strong electrophiles (E+)
- intermediate is a carbocation
(like addition to one of the pi bonds) - nucleophiles don't add to the cation
(H+ leaves, regenerates benzene ring) - reaction is substitution (E+ for H+)
Mechanism of Aromatic Substitution
 
Mechanism - why slower than alkenes - Ea for electrophilic attack on benzene is greater than Ea for electrophilic attack on an alkene
- although the cation intermediate is delocalized and more stable than an alkyl cation, benzene is much more stable than an alkene
Mechanism - why substitution - the substitution product regains the aromatic stability
- an addition product would be a conjugated diene, not as stable
Bromination of Benzene - electrophile is Br+
- generated from Br2 + FeBr3
Chlorination of Benzene - electrophile is Cl+
- generated from Cl2 + FeCl3
Nitration of Benzene - electrophile is NO2+
- generated from H2SO4 + HNO3
 Sulfonation of Benzene - electrophile is HSO3+
- generated from H2SO4 + SO3
 Friedel-Crafts Alkylation - electrophile is an alkyl cation (R+)
- generated from RCl + AlCl3

Friedel-Crafts Acylation - electrophile is an acyl cation (RCO+)
- generated from RCOCl + AlCl3

Substituent Effects - substituents on the benzene ring can affect the reaction in two ways:
reactivity - substituted benzene may react faster or slower than benzene itself reacts orientation - the new group may be oriented ortho, meta, or para with respect to the original substituent Reactivity Effects - activating - reaction is faster
observed with electron-donating groups that make the ring more electron-rich - deactivating - reaction is slower
observed with electron-withdrawing groups that make the ring less electron-rich Orientation Effects - substituent already present on the benzene ring determines the location of the new group
- ortho,para-directors: electron-donating groups direct the new group mainly to ortho & para
- meta-directors: electron-withdrawing groups direct new group mainly meta
Ortho, Para Directors - the best cation is formed when the electrophile adds either ortho or para
(better than unsubstituted) Meta Directors - the best cation is formed when the electrophile adds meta
(but this is worse than unsubstituted) 
Classifying Substituents - activating and o,p-directing:
alkyl, aryl, O and N groups - deactivating and m-directing:
N+ groups, polar multiple bonds - deactivating but o,p-directing:
the halogens (F, Cl, Br, I) (electron-withdrawing atoms, but lone pairs can stabilize the cation when it is ortho or para) Oxidation of Side Chains - alkyl groups attached to aromatic rings are easily oxidized to carboxylic acids
Reduction of Aromatic Rings - under extreme conditions, a benzene ring can be hydrogenated to a cyclohexane ring

Polycyclic Aromatics - larger aromatic compounds can be made from fused benzene rings
naphthalene / / / anthracene Heterocyclic Aromatics - some aromatic rings have atoms other than carbon
pyridine / / / pyrrole / / / furan Synthetic Strategy - synthesis of complex compounds requires attention to the order in which groups are attached
- retrosynthetic analysis - think backwards one step at a time
(What reaction could have made this target compound?) Synthesis Example - target compound: p-nitrobenzoic acid
Synthesis Example

Graphite - extended sheets of benzene rings
electrically conductive good lubricant 
Fullerenes - curved closed form of 60 carbon atoms in benzene rings with intervening 5-membered rings
(soccer ball pattern) - subject of the 1996 Nobel Prize in chemistry
Friends hope u all liked it please do comment & rate on this article All the best.............
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this article: 62 points
(with 12 
in 13 votes ) [?]
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 18:28:57 IST)
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| fantastic.......... |
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 18:32:33 IST)
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| good !!!!!!!!!!!!! |
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 18:33:22 IST)
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| nice............. |
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 18:42:30 IST)
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| Good post |
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 22:48:00 IST)
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| gud... |
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(posted on 19 Sep 2007 22:48:41 IST)
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| u deserve the best rate :) |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 01:08:58 IST)
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| gud job...... |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 10:17:21 IST)
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Good !!! lage raho !!! |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 10:50:34 IST)
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| nice............. |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 11:08:00 IST)
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| bingo |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 12:46:26 IST)
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| very good post.....keep it up!!! |
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 19:17:46 IST)
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thanks dear friends
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(posted on 20 Sep 2007 21:56:23 IST)
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| nice 1.........helpful |
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