dat_student Junior Member 10+ Year Member 5+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Jul 15, 2005 #1 Advertisement - Members don't see this ad ....CH2CH3 ....|........H+ Br-C-H ----> ....|........H2O ....CH3 Why is this an SN1 reaction? I also don't quite understand why we need H+. Anyone has any ideas?
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad ....CH2CH3 ....|........H+ Br-C-H ----> ....|........H2O ....CH3 Why is this an SN1 reaction? I also don't quite understand why we need H+. Anyone has any ideas?
Comet208 Full Member 7+ Year Member 15+ Year Member 20+ Year Member Jul 15, 2005 #2 it is SN1 b/c: Br is a weak base (good leaving group) so it leaves in step one. Water is a polar protic solvent required for SN1 H+ is a give away for SN1 (polar protic solvent) this has SN1 all over it! Upvote 0 Downvote
it is SN1 b/c: Br is a weak base (good leaving group) so it leaves in step one. Water is a polar protic solvent required for SN1 H+ is a give away for SN1 (polar protic solvent) this has SN1 all over it!
dat_student Junior Member 10+ Year Member 5+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Jul 15, 2005 #3 Comet208 said: it is SN1 b/c: Br is a weak base (good leaving group) so it leaves in step one. Water is a polar protic solvent required for SN1 H+ is a give away for SN1 (polar protic solvent) this has SN1 all over it! Click to expand... Thanks, I didn't pay attention to the polar protic stuff As soon as I saw it's a secondary carbon I felt it was SN2. My stupid book lists SN1 and E1 only under tertiary carbon. Upvote 0 Downvote
Comet208 said: it is SN1 b/c: Br is a weak base (good leaving group) so it leaves in step one. Water is a polar protic solvent required for SN1 H+ is a give away for SN1 (polar protic solvent) this has SN1 all over it! Click to expand... Thanks, I didn't pay attention to the polar protic stuff As soon as I saw it's a secondary carbon I felt it was SN2. My stupid book lists SN1 and E1 only under tertiary carbon.