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Arenium ions are not obligatory intermediates in electrophilic aromatic substitution.


ABSTRACT: Our computational and experimental investigation of the reaction of anisole with Cl2 in nonpolar CCl4 solution challenges two fundamental tenets of the traditional SEAr (arenium ion) mechanism of aromatic electrophilic substitution. Instead of this direct substitution process, the alternative addition-elimination (AE) pathway is favored energetically. This AE mechanism rationalizes the preferred ortho and para substitution orientation of anisole easily. Moreover, neither the SEAr nor the AE mechanisms involve the formation of a ?-complex (Wheland-type) intermediate in the rate-controlling stage. Contrary to the conventional interpretations, the substitution (SEAr) mechanism proceeds concertedly via a single transition state. Experimental NMR investigations of the anisole chlorination reaction course at various temperatures reveal the formation of tetrachloro addition by-products and thus support the computed addition-elimination mechanism of anisole chlorination in nonpolar media. The important autocatalytic effect of the HCl reaction product was confirmed by spectroscopic (UV-visible) investigations and by HCl-augmented computational modeling.

SUBMITTER: Galabov B 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4104905 | biostudies-other | 2014 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Arenium ions are not obligatory intermediates in electrophilic aromatic substitution.

Galabov Boris B   Koleva Gergana G   Simova Svetlana S   Hadjieva Boriana B   Schaefer Henry F HF   Schleyer Paul von Ragué Pv  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20140627 28


Our computational and experimental investigation of the reaction of anisole with Cl2 in nonpolar CCl4 solution challenges two fundamental tenets of the traditional SEAr (arenium ion) mechanism of aromatic electrophilic substitution. Instead of this direct substitution process, the alternative addition-elimination (AE) pathway is favored energetically. This AE mechanism rationalizes the preferred ortho and para substitution orientation of anisole easily. Moreover, neither the SEAr nor the AE mech  ...[more]

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