(a)
Interpretation:
Plausible mechanism should be drawn given the major product of 2-methyl-2-hexene.
Concept Introduction:
E2 reaction is a bimolecular elimination reaction in which alkene compounds formed in a single step.
Rate of E2 reaction is depends upon the concentration of substrate and concentration of base. Because in a bimolecular reaction, there should involves two chemical entities.
Equation for the rate of E2 reaction is,
(b)
Interpretation:
The expected rate equation should be found for the given reaction.
Concept Introduction:
E2 reaction is a bimolecular elimination reaction in which alkene compounds formed in a single step. Alkenes are formed when alkyl halides are treated with bases via eliminating one β-proton and one α-halo group of the alkyl halide.
Rate of E2 reaction is depends upon the concentration of substrate and concentration of base. Because in a bimolecular reaction, there should involves two chemical entities.
Equation for the rate of E2 reaction is,
(c)
Interpretation:
The change in rate when concentration of base is doubled in given reaction has to be explained.
Concept Introduction:
E2 reaction is a bimolecular elimination reaction in which alkene compounds formed in a single step. Alkenes are formed when alkyl halides are treated with bases via eliminating one β-proton and one α-halo group of the alkyl halide.
Rate of E2 reaction is depends upon the concentration of substrate and concentration of base. Because in a bimolecular reaction, there should involves two chemical entities.
Equation for the rate of E2 reaction is,
(d)
Interpretation:
Energy level diagram should be drawn for the given reaction process.
Concept Introduction:
E2 reaction is a bimolecular elimination reaction in which alkene compounds formed in a single step. Alkenes are formed when alkyl halides are treated with bases via eliminating one β-proton and one α-halo group of the alkyl halide.
Energy diagram of an E2 reaction has only one hump because only one step is involved in the E2 reaction.
Transition state is a state in between the reactant and product.
In the transition state of E2 reaction: the abstraction of β-proton by the base, removal of leaving group (halo-group) and formation of double bond are taking place.
(e)
Interpretation:
The transition state should be drawn for the given transformation of reaction.
Concept Introduction:
E2 reaction is a bimolecular elimination reaction in which alkene compounds formed in a single step. Alkenes are formed when alkyl halides are treated with bases via eliminating one β-proton and one α-halo group of the alkyl halide.
Energy diagram of an E2 reaction has only one hump because only one step is involved in the E2 reaction.
Transition State: The state which defines the highest potential energy with respect to reaction co-ordinate between reactant and product. It is usually denoted by using the symbol ‘≠’.
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Chapter 7 Solutions
ORGANIC CHEMISTRYPKGDRL+MLCRL MDL
- Can you answer question 7 please, I keep getting stuck on it, thank youarrow_forwardoption choice: Isoleucine Histidine Threonine Alanine Lysine Aspartate Tryptophan Tyrosine Leucine Arginine Cysteine Asparagine Valine Glutamine Glycine Methionine Serine Proline Phenylalanine Glutamatearrow_forwardsketch the nature of the metal-alkylidene bonding interactions.arrow_forward
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