Macmillan Learning © In the reaction between the alkene shown and HBr, draw the structures as directed. H HBr Select Draw Rings More C more stable carbocation intermediate Draw the more stable carbocation intermediate. H + less stable carbocation intermediate Erase + Br + Br major product Draw the less stable carbocation intermediate. Select Draw Rings More C H Erase
Reactions of Alkyl and Aryl halides
In organic chemistry, an alkyl halide is formed when an atom of hydrogen is switched by a halogen in a hydrocarbon or aliphatic compound. An aryl halide is formed when an atom of hydrogen is substituted by a halogen atom in an aromatic compound. Metals react with aryl halides and alkyl halides and they also go through nucleophilic substitution reactions and elimination reactions.
Zaitsev's Rule in Organic Chemistry
Alexander Zaitsev (also pronounced as Saytzeff), in 1875, prepared a rule to help predict the result of elimination reactions which stated, "The favored product in dehydrohalogenation reactions is that alkene that has the majority of alkyl groups attached to the double-bonded carbon atoms."
Tosylate
Tosylates are important functional groups in organic chemistry, mainly because of two important properties which they possess:
Alkyl Halides
A functional group is a collection of several atoms or bonds with certain characteristic chemical properties and reactions associated with it. There is a presence of a halogen atom (F, Cl, Br, or I; it represents any halogen atom), as a functional group in alkyl halides. Therefore, it can be said that alkanes that contain a halogen compound are called alkyl halides.
![Macmillan Learning
In the reaction between the alkene shown and HBr, draw the structures as directed.
H
Select
HBr
Draw Rings More
more stable
carbocation
intermediate
Draw the more stable carbocation intermediate.
C H
+
less stable
carbocation
intermediate
Erase
+ Br
+ Br
major product
Draw the less stable carbocation intermediate.
Select Draw Rings
More
C H
Erase](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F8acd4021-f643-407d-9d42-7124cf5151d6%2F59650f99-b388-43fe-91f2-3dad24cd449f%2Fouq38n_processed.png&w=3840&q=75)
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