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TLDR: 3 questions
1. Why do aprotic solvents increase nucleophile reactivity (please don't answer with "because protic solvents stabilize them")?
2. What is the shortcut for knowing if absolute configuration (R/S) is inverted in Sn2?
3. Why don't Ketones/Aldehydes undergo Sn1/Sn2?
I think I know the generic mechanisms pretty well, but not in a way that is useful for MCAT.
I understand the condition differences for SN2/E2 vs SN1/E1, but I'm not really clear on why or when elimination is more likely than substitution and vice versa. So I'll just go down the list EK provides since it is pretty comprehensive and clear.
The Nucleophile and the 5 S's.
Nucleophile: Sn2 requires/prefers a strong nucleophile. Nucleophile doesn't matter in Sn1. In other words, strong nucleophile (MeO-, EtO-, etc) = SN2.
Substrate: Sterically hindered & tertiary = Sn1. Methyl and primary = Sn2. Secondary could be either
Solvent: Protic = Sn1 for 2 reasons. It stabilizes the nucleophile, which prevents Sn2. It also stabilizes the carbocation which speeds up the RDS in Sn1. Aprotic = Sn2 because.. I don't know why. Hopefully someone can explain why nucleophiles are more reactive in aprotic solvents? I know that protic reduces reactivity, but not why aprotic increases reactivity.
Speed: Sn2 depends on [nu] and [substrate]. Sn1 depends only on [substrate] because the slow step is the leaving group falling off, so the nucleophile is not rate determining.
Stereochemistry: Sn2 = relative inversion (can someone tell me that Kaplan shortcut again? The one that tells you the only situation that you actually undergo absolute config inversion). Sn1 = racemization since the carbocation intermediate is planar and the nu can add from either side.
Skeleton rearrangement. Sn2 = no rearrangement. Sn1 = possible rearrangement (hydride, alkyl shift)
So that's easy, Sn1 and Sn2 are easy to differentiate as are E1 and E2.
This thread actually came from my other thread about nu addition for ketones/aldehydes vs nu substitution for carboxylic acids. I don't understand why/when a functional group would prefer addition over substitution.
TLDR: 3 questions
1. Why do aprotic solvents increase nucleophile reactivity (please don't answer with "because protic solvents stabilize them")?
2. What is the shortcut for knowing if absolute configuration (R/S) is inverted in Sn2?
3. Why don't Ketones/Aldehydes undergo Sn1/Sn2?
1. Why do aprotic solvents increase nucleophile reactivity (please don't answer with "because protic solvents stabilize them")?
2. What is the shortcut for knowing if absolute configuration (R/S) is inverted in Sn2?
3. Why don't Ketones/Aldehydes undergo Sn1/Sn2?
I think I know the generic mechanisms pretty well, but not in a way that is useful for MCAT.
I understand the condition differences for SN2/E2 vs SN1/E1, but I'm not really clear on why or when elimination is more likely than substitution and vice versa. So I'll just go down the list EK provides since it is pretty comprehensive and clear.
The Nucleophile and the 5 S's.
Nucleophile: Sn2 requires/prefers a strong nucleophile. Nucleophile doesn't matter in Sn1. In other words, strong nucleophile (MeO-, EtO-, etc) = SN2.
Substrate: Sterically hindered & tertiary = Sn1. Methyl and primary = Sn2. Secondary could be either
Solvent: Protic = Sn1 for 2 reasons. It stabilizes the nucleophile, which prevents Sn2. It also stabilizes the carbocation which speeds up the RDS in Sn1. Aprotic = Sn2 because.. I don't know why. Hopefully someone can explain why nucleophiles are more reactive in aprotic solvents? I know that protic reduces reactivity, but not why aprotic increases reactivity.
Speed: Sn2 depends on [nu] and [substrate]. Sn1 depends only on [substrate] because the slow step is the leaving group falling off, so the nucleophile is not rate determining.
Stereochemistry: Sn2 = relative inversion (can someone tell me that Kaplan shortcut again? The one that tells you the only situation that you actually undergo absolute config inversion). Sn1 = racemization since the carbocation intermediate is planar and the nu can add from either side.
Skeleton rearrangement. Sn2 = no rearrangement. Sn1 = possible rearrangement (hydride, alkyl shift)
So that's easy, Sn1 and Sn2 are easy to differentiate as are E1 and E2.
This thread actually came from my other thread about nu addition for ketones/aldehydes vs nu substitution for carboxylic acids. I don't understand why/when a functional group would prefer addition over substitution.
TLDR: 3 questions
1. Why do aprotic solvents increase nucleophile reactivity (please don't answer with "because protic solvents stabilize them")?
2. What is the shortcut for knowing if absolute configuration (R/S) is inverted in Sn2?
3. Why don't Ketones/Aldehydes undergo Sn1/Sn2?