Eas with 2 ACTIVATING rings

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  1. Dental Student
I know that was reactions with 2 rings only add to one side like this oneone , but what if they are both activating instead of one act one deact
1435870238072798476345.jpg
 
Is B the answer?

Ketone = meta
Amine = ortho/para

process of elimination...
 
what was the answer?
Oh sorry. Yea B was the answer. The explanation said one ring would be activating and one deactivating so i asked if both were deactivating. Also if there are 2 electron withdrawing groups on one benzene ring, the stronger EWG would dictate correct? Like cooh would direct not Cl for example on one benzene ring.
 
oh my b, I didn't read your question; I just tried to answer the question in the picture lol.
 
Why can't the answer be A or E?
The C=O is EWG....given. It's a meta director. Given. Shouldn't it brominate on the meta position on the ring closest to the C=O? This isn't a FC reaction where deactivated rings can't get more substituents...

And the Br on the ring closest to the NH director should be on O and P positions.
 
Why can't the answer be A or E?
The C=O is EWG....given. It's a meta director. Given. Shouldn't it brominate on the meta position on the ring closest to the C=O? This isn't a FC reaction where deactivated rings can't get more substituents...

And the Br on the ring closest to the NH director should be on O and P positions.

You are only adding 1 equivalent of Br. A and E have too many Br groups added.
 
I don't think so. After you add 1 Bromine to the right group, it makes the positions meta to the Bromine less reactive because Bromine (although a deactivating group) is an ortho/para director.
 
I don't think so. After you add 1 Bromine to the right group, it makes the positions meta to the Bromine less reactive because Bromine (although a deactivating group) is an ortho/para director.

Bromine is a deactivating group and O/P director, and it's true that adding it to a ring deactivates the ring more, but the NH still controls where future substituents will go since it is a stronger activator...right?
 
I'd go for choice A if there were xs Br2 and Fe2Br3. But, your logic makes sense to me; I could be totally off-track with the 1 equivalent thing.
 
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