Markovnikov's rule
Examples of Markovnikov's rule in the following topics:
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Addition of Strong Brønsted Acids
- He formulated this trend as an empirical rule we now call The Markovnikov Rule:
- Empirical rules like the Markovnikov Rule are useful aids for remembering and predicting experimental results.
- The Markovnikov Rule, for example, suggests there are common and important principles at work in these addition reactions, but it does not tell us what they are.
- Evidently, alkyl substituents act to increase the rate of addition by lowering the activation energy, ΔE‡1 of the rate determining step, and it is here we should look for a rationalization of Markovnikov's rule.
- From this information, applying the Hammond Postulate, we arrive at a plausible rationalization of Markovnikov's rule.
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Reactions of Alkenes and Alkynes
- If the alkene is asymmetric, the reaction will follow Markovnikov's rule—the halide will be added to the carbon with more alkyl substituents.
- This rule dictates that the addition of a hydrogen halide (HX, in the case of HBr) to an alkene will lead to a product where the hydrogen is attached to the carbon with fewer alkyl substituents, while the halide group is attached to the carbon with more alkyl substituents.
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Addition of Lewis Acids (Electrophilic Reagents)
- The regioselectivity of the above reactions may be explained by the same mechanism we used to rationalize the Markovnikov rule.
- The oxymercuration reaction gives the product predicted by Markovnikov's rule; hydroboration on the other hand gives the "anti-Markovnikov" product.
- Nevertheless, the carbocation stability rule cited above remains a useful way to predict the products from hydroboration reactions.
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Addition by Electrophilic Reagents
- Although these electrophilic additions to alkynes are sluggish, they do take place and generally display Markovnikov Rule regioselectivity and anti-stereoselectivity.
- As a rule, electrophilic addition reactions to alkenes and alkynes proceed by initial formation of a pi-complex, in which the electrophile accepts electrons from and becomes weakly bonded to the multiple bond.
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Hydration of Alkynes and Tautomerism
- For terminal alkynes the addition of water follows the Markovnikov rule, as in the second example below, and the final product ia a methyl ketone ( except for acetylene, shown in the first example ).
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Intermolecular Addition Reactions
- The anti-Markovnikov addition of HBr to alkenes is one such reaction, and the peroxide initiated addition of carbon tetrachloride to 1-hexene is another.
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Rearrangement of Carbocations
- The addition of HCl to 3,3-dimethyl-1-butene, for example, leads to an unexpected product, 2-chloro-2,3-dimethylbutane, in somewhat greater yield than 3-chloro-2,2-dimethylbutane, the expected Markovnikov product.
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Addition Reactions Involving Other Cyclic Onium Intermediates
- Since the hydroboration procedure is most commonly used to hydrate alkenes in an anti-Markovnikov fashion, we also need to know the stereoselectivity of the second oxidation reaction, which substitutes a hydroxyl group for the boron atom.
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Hydroboration Reactions and Oxidations
- As with alkenes, the B-H reagent group adds in an apparently anti-Markovnikov manner, due to the fact that the boron is the electrophile, not the hydrogen.
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