Drag the labels to identify the appropriate reagents for each reaction. Each label is associated with the arrow adjacent to it. The direction of the arrow is important! R. Answer Bank H- -HO- H,, Pd/C H, SO, heat R B HBr H,O, H, SO, MCPBA NaOMe Br, R H- -Br R. R R. R C A R. Br Br R D
Basics in Organic Reactions Mechanisms
In organic chemistry, the mechanism of an organic reaction is defined as a complete step-by-step explanation of how a reaction of organic compounds happens. A completely detailed mechanism would relate the first structure of the reactants with the last structure of the products and would represent changes in structure and energy all through the reaction step.
Heterolytic Bond Breaking
Heterolytic bond breaking is also known as heterolysis or heterolytic fission or ionic fission. It is defined as breaking of a covalent bond between two different atoms in which one atom gains both of the shared pair of electrons. The atom that gains both electrons is more electronegative than the other atom in covalent bond. The energy needed for heterolytic fission is called as heterolytic bond dissociation energy.
Polar Aprotic Solvent
Solvents that are chemically polar in nature and are not capable of hydrogen bonding (implying that a hydrogen atom directly linked with an electronegative atom is not found) are referred to as polar aprotic solvents. Some commonly used polar aprotic solvents are acetone, DMF, acetonitrile, DMSO, etc.
Oxygen Nucleophiles
Oxygen being an electron rich species with a lone pair electron, can act as a good nucleophile. Typically, oxygen nucleophiles can be found in these compounds- water, hydroxides and alcohols.
Carbon Nucleophiles
We are aware that carbon belongs to group IV and hence does not possess any lone pair of electrons. Implying that neutral carbon is not a nucleophile then how is carbon going to be nucleophilic? The answer to this is that when a carbon atom is attached to a metal (can be seen in the case of organometallic compounds), the metal atom develops a partial positive charge and carbon develops a partial negative charge, hence making carbon nucleophilic.
![**Instruction:**
Drag the labels to identify the appropriate reagents for each reaction. Each label is associated with the arrow adjacent to it. The direction of the arrow is important!
**Diagram Description:**
1. **Molecule B:** An alcohol with a central carbon atom bonded to four R groups (substituents) and an OH group.
2. **Molecule A:** An alkene with a central double bond between two carbon atoms, each bonded to two R groups.
3. **Molecule C:** Epoxide with a three-membered ring structure involving an oxygen atom and two carbon atoms, each bonded to two R groups.
4. **Molecule F:** An alkyl bromide with a central carbon bonded to three R groups, a hydrogen, and a bromine atom.
5. **Molecule E:** An alkane with a central carbon bonded to four R groups.
6. **Molecule D:** A dibromoalkane with a central carbon bonded to two R groups and two bromine atoms.
**Reagents in the Answer Bank:**
- H₂, Pd/C
- H₂SO₄, heat
- HBr
- H₂O, H₂SO₄
- mCPBA
- NaOMe
- Br₂
**Explanation:**
Arrows connecting the molecules indicate potential reactions between these different organic compounds. Each blank box along the arrows represents the reagent necessary to achieve the transformation from one molecule to another. The user is required to select the correct reagents from the answer bank and match them with the corresponding reactions on the diagram.](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F76163d54-4057-4aab-9f8c-7d200a1f798e%2F56ac7868-8cc6-41c7-895c-fda9907b6011%2Fzj5q2ji_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
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