can someone help clarify why tertiary alkyl halide (tert-butyl chloride) react with HCl and alcohol much quicker than a primary alkyl halide (methyl halide)?
can someone help clarify why tertiary alkyl halide (tert-butyl chloride) react with HCl and alcohol much quicker than a primary alkyl halide (methyl halide)?
The primary/methyl actually go through an SN2 mechanism following protonation of the alcohol.
The slowest and rate determining step in the above reaction (which is an SN1 reaction-you can't have an SN2 with a tertiary alkyl halide, and the alcohol sucks as a nucleophile to undergo SN2 with the primary alkyl halide) is the formation of the carbocation (CH3)3C-Cl-->(CH3)3C+ (after the leaving group, in this case, Cl, leaves).
but the question is asking for the fastest reaction...so how come the slowest and rate determining step is the fastest reaction? i'm a bit confused.
No no, that is the slowest step amongst all the steps for the TERTIARY alkyl halide. SN1 reactions happen in two steps. SN2 reactions happen in one step. For the SN1 reaction, the formation of the carbocation is the slowest step out of the two steps JUST FOR THE SN1 REACTION. It doesn't mean that the slowest step in the tertiary SN1 reaction is slower than the step for the methylchloride reaction.
Suppose you have two groups, groups A and B. Group A has Joe, Danny, and Mike. Group B has only Peter.
Now, suppose I tell you that in Group A, Joe is fatter than both Danny and Mike. This means that Joe is the fattest kid in Group A. Does that mean he is fatter than Peter in Group B? No! We don't know anything about Peter. All we know is that Joe is the fattest kid in Group A, but not necessarily fatter than Peter, who is in Group B. Same goes for the reactions. The formation of the carbocation is the slowest step for THAT SN1 REACTION-it doesn't have to do with the SN2 reaction of the methyl chloride.
Maybe I shouldn't have used the word "slowest step" (even though it is) for the formation of the carbocation. Think of it as the toughest step. We need to get it going. The three alkyl/methyl groups on the teritary carbon is t-butyl stabilize the carbocation by donating electrons via hyperconjugation (remember, alkyl groups are electron donating). They make this tough step easier for us, stabilizing the transition state, and anything that stabilizes the transition state (remember, transition states are highly reactive, unstable species) makes the reaction go faster. Don't worry about the formation of the carbocation being slow for this question-just think of it as being a tough step, and our friendly electron donating alkyl/methyl groups on t-butyl make this easier on us.
Sorry if my example is ******ed lol, but does that help claify things?
I was thinking that the reaction (alkyl halide and HCl & -OH) was SN2 because there was a strong base (alcohol) so I assumed that the primary alkyl halide would be favored thus react faster. so does this mean that -OH is not a strong base in this reaction? to be more specific, what is the mechanism for this reaction (i forgot)?
so did the OP mistake the OH for ROH in their original post?
jeez this one is giving me a headache
also, Pookiez88, is it pretty much a rule that alcohols are too weak to be the nucleophiles for Sn2 rxns? I know I've seen reactions where they are the nucleophiles in Sn1s, but can't think off the top of my head where they have been the nucleophile's in Sn2s.......
thanks
Yeah, I think the OP just confused OH- for ROH. Alcohols are poor nucleophiles; they generally don't partake in SN2 reactions (but can do SN1 reactions).
Ummm I think I may be ******ed or something but.. R-OH + HBR is an SN2 mechanism.
I do agree with you that the acid-base rxn will form H2O. I know that the reactions will proceed SN1 for the first one because it is tertiary, but the second one is a methy halide (very strongly favored for sn2, it is the worst possible substrate you could use for sn1). This issue im having is, H2O is a protic solvent (which would strongly favor sn1), however it can also dissociate to hydronium and hydroxide ions (meaning an sn2 rxn is possible). What effect takes higher precedence; substrate effects or solvent effects? Substrate effects would make the methly halide proceed Sn2 (though very very slowly whenever H2O dissociates into hydroxide) while solvent effects would make the methyl halide proceed via SN1 (again very very slowly because while solvation occurs, it is nearly impossible for the cloride to leave and result in a primary carbocation therby giving a SN1).
There are no hard set rules, you need to look at all the players involved. Frankly, the answer to this question is probably best determined experimentally and would never appear as an mcat question; only with the tertiary Carbocation can you be 100% sure it will proceed Sn1 (due to steric hindrance AND solvation), the methly chloride part of the question would not appear.
Let me know if i'm being a total idiot...