ANALYSIS OF NUCLEOPHILIC AND ELECTROPHILIC
SUBSTITUTION REACTION OF TERTIARY BUTANOL AND BROMOBENZENE
By
Ni
Luh Gede Enik Karnila Yanti
Chemistry
Education Department, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Ganesha
University of Education
email:
enikkarnilayanti@yahoo.co.id
Abstract
The aims of the experiment was
to (1) undertand the electrophilic substitution reaction of bromobenzene and
nuchleophilic substitution reaction of tert-butyl alcohol (2) identify the
products of those reactions. The compound
used are tertiary buthanol and bromobenzene were prepared by the laboratory
assistant as the subjects of this experiment. The mechanism and the product of
the substitution reaction were as the object in this experiment. The procedure was divided into two steps are
electrophilic and nuchleophilic substitution reaction. Then,
identification of products was done by comparing the physical and chemical
properties of the products with theory. Based on comparison, it was known that
this experiment produced exactly the same compound as the theory. The
electrophilic substitution reaction produced result of 4– bromonitrobenzene
while the nucleophilic substitution reaction produced result of tert-butyl
chloride.
Key
words: Nucleophilic substitution reaction, electrophilic substitution reaction,
4–bromonitrobenzene; tert-butyl
chloride.
INTRODUCTION
Substitution reactions can occur in the positively
charged carbon substrate (carbonium ions) with the excess electron species /
negative charge (nucleophiles), so called nucleophilic substitution reactions
(SN). In addition, substitution reactions can also occur on the negatively
charged carbon substrate (electron source) with shortage electron species /
positive charge (electrophiles), so called electrophilic substitution reactions
(SE) (Frieda & Suja, 2004).
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction
Nucleophile is a species that likes to be the core
because negatively charged or electron-rich. If the substitution reaction
involving nucleophiles organic compounds, the reaction is called nucleophilic
substitution (SN), which S states substitution and N state the nucleophilic.
General reaction is as follow
Nu: + R-X → R-Nu + X:
There
are two
kind of nucleophiles, are negative nucleophile
(Nu :-) and
neutral nucleophiles (Nu :). Negative
nucleophiles have not bonded pairs of
electrons and negatively charged,
for example, chloride ions (Cl-), carbanion
ion (R – CH2:-), hydroxyl
ion (OH-), etc. Neutral nucleophiles
(Nu :) have
not bonded pairs
of electrons and uncharged,
like alcohol (R-OH), tioalcohol (R
- SH), ether
(R - O - R).
One example of nucleophilic substitution reactions of alkyl halides is
the hydrolysis reaction by alkaline solution to form alcohol.
R – X + OH- → R-
OH + X-
X is called group apart
(group away)
Nucleophilic substitution reactions can be divided into two, namely: unimolecular
nucleophilic substitution reactions
(SN1) and bimolecular nucleophilic substitution reaction (SN2).
The
rate of
nucleophilic substitution reactions
that depend on the substrate
concentration and does not depend
on the concentration of nucleophile called unimolecular
SN1 nucleophilic substitution
reactions. Reaction rate equation is as follows.
The reaction rate = k [substrate]
The reaction rate = k [substrate]
Nucleophilic substitution reactions that
occur in tertiary butyl alcohol belonging to the SN1 reaction. This is because the structure is the tertiary reagent
and solvent used
is polar solvent (HCl). Tertiary structure has a big steric hindrance that
cannot undergo SN2
reactions. SN1 reaction rate does not depend on the nucleophile concentration,
but depends only on concentration alkyl halide. Ionization stage is
the slowest step in
the overall reaction sequence, so it is a rate-determining step. SN1 reaction
that occurs in tertiary butyl alcohol, the
presence of halogen will replace
hydroxyl groups. Ion hydroxyl group is
going bad, so
there must be bonded to H+
and OH-
released as H2O.
It can be described in nucleophilic substitution reactions that occur in tertiary butyl alcohol
with HBr (McMurry and Simanek, 2007).
If
the rate of
nucleophilic substitution reactions
depends on the concentration of substrate and nucleophile,
the reaction considered two levels, and
expressed as SN2. Reaction
rate equation is follow:
The reaction
rate
= k [substrate]
[nucleophile]
In the SN2 reaction, the nucleophile
attacking from the opposite direction to the group will be separated, resulting
in the inverse configuration. If the alkyl halide is actively hydrolyzed, the
resulting product is also optically active. Most primary alkyl halides undergo
hydrolysis reaction by SN2 mechanism. SN2 reaction is
contrast to SN1 reaction, in terms of new bond formation and
breaking old ties. For example, the reaction of methyl bromide with hydroxide
ions is SN2 reaction because of the increased concentration of
methyl bromide causes quickened reaction, as well as to increase the
concentration of hydroxyl ions. SN2 reaction called simultaneous
reactions cause break the old ties and new bond formation occur simultaneously.
SN2 and SN1 reaction
mechanism is influenced by
several factors, namely the structure of the substrate, the properties nucleophile, the polarity of the solvent and the properties group away.
Generally, primary alkyl halides
react with SN2 mechanism, tertiary alkyl
halides SN1 mechanism and secondary
alkyl halides can react with SN2 and SN1
mechanisms. This caused by the electron density on the carbon atom that
binds halide. At the tertiary alkyl halides
are three alkyl groups. When alkyl halides
are ionized, the carbonium
ion formed is more stable, due to the induction
effect of the three groups
were tied. In
primary alkyl halides there is only one alkyl, alkyl halide when
ionized, the resulting carbonium ion is not
stable. The more stable carbonium ions generated, the SN1 reaction mechanism dominates.
Strong nucleophiles such as alcoxide
ions and hydroxide ions will undergo SN2
reaction mechanism, whereas weak nucleophiles
such as water and alcohol are the dominant mechanism of SN1 reaction. In big nucleophile
concentration is the dominant mechanism of SN2 reactions, and the
small nucleophile concentration is the dominant mechanism of SN1 reaction.
If
the
solvent polarity has
the great, tendency of alkyl
halides undergo SN1
substitution reaction with the larger mechanism. This
is due to the polar solvent to
facilitate substrate and stabilize ionized ions
generated. Conversely, if the
solvent polarity has
small or non-polar and the
possibility of a small ionization, so that the
dominant mechanism is SN2.
The
properties of
the group away, for
example halogen atom, do not affect the mechanism of the reaction,
but the effect on the rate of reaction.
Electrophilic
Substitution Reaction
The most
important reaction of aromatic compounds is Electrophilic substitution
reaction. Described as an electrophilic (E +) which will react with the
aromatic ring by replacing one hydrogen atom, the reaction is as follow
ArH + E+ → Ar – E + H+
Many substituents’ can react with
aromatic compounds through electrophilic substitution reaction. Depends on the
reagent, aromatic can react with halogen, nitrate, sulfonate, alkyl and acyl.
By using a few simple materials, the reaction can produce thousands of substituted
aromatic compounds.
Benzene is very easy to get electrophilic attack
because benzene π electron rich. Benzene acts as an electron donor (a Lewis
base or a Nucleophilic), so it will be easy to react by accepting electrons
(Lewis acid or electrophile).
In general, there is electrophilic substitution
reaction mechanism: first, if a positive ion electrophilic X+. Two of the
delocalized electrons in the systems of interest towards X+ and form a bond.
Resulting in termination of delocalization, although not entirely.
Ions are formed at this stage is not the result. This stage is only an
intermediate step. The intermediate result is
In the intermediate results still occurs delocalization, but only in some
areas of the ions. Ion in the intermediate results is the positively charged as
a result of a merger of positive ions and neutral molecules. Positive charge then
spread along the delocalized on the ring.
Second steps will be
introducing a new ion, Y-. Impossible to obtain only positive ions in a chemical
system. So the Y-ion is an ion that binds to the X + previously.
Unpaired electrons in Y- form bonds with hydrogen atoms on the top of the
ring. This means that the pair of electrons that connects hydrogen with the
ring is not required anymore. The section then moves down and fill the empty
spaces in area of electron delocalization and electron delocalization returns
its original. Therefore, the stability of benzene was back.
METHOD
Equipments and Materials
Experiment was
done at organic chemistry laboratory Ganesha University of Education. This
experiment need time approximately 12 hours to finish all steps. To conduct the
experiment need some equipments and materials. The equipments were used are one
volumetric flask 100 mL, two spatulas, one set statif and clamp, one funnel,
one of distillation equipment, one beaker glass 100 mL, one beaker glass 200
mL, one beaker glass 500 mL, one graduated cylinder mL, one graduated cylinder 10 mL, one
graduated cylinder 25 mL, 12 test tubes, one test tube rack, two watch glass,
three petri dish, three drop pipette, one cycle flask 100 mL, one thermometer, one
claisen adaptor, one Erlenmeyer flask 100 mL, one electrical balance, three
capillary pipette, one heater, one metal block, one holder, one stirrer and one
separatory funnel. The materials were used are 15 mL of concentrated HCl, 5 mL
of tertiary butyl alcohol, a sufficient t-butanol, 10 mL of sodium bicarbonate,
1 L of aquades, 5 mL of anhydrous substrate, 5 mL of concentrated HNO3,
5 mL of H2SO4, a sufficient ice, a sufficient
bromobenzene, 20 mL ethanol 95%, and filter paper.
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction
First, 15 mL of concentrated HCl were cooled in
the ice bath and it was poured into separatory funnel. After that, 5 mL of
tertiary butyl alcohol were added drop by drop then it was shaked. Shaked was
continued until 20 minutes and it was let until form two layers. Bottom layer
was separated as HCl and up layer was washed by using 5 mL of aquades then 10
mL of sodium bicarbonate. The product was dried by anhydrous substance. Finally
the product was collected at temperature 49-520C as tertiary butyl
chloride and it has nD=1.386. Since
the product is volatile, so distillation for determining the boiling point was
not conducted. Only refractory index of product was checked.
Electrophilic
Substitution Reaction
Five mL of concentrated HNO3
and 5 mL of H2SO4 were mixed in boiling flask and then it
was cooled. After that boiling flask, claisen adaptor and thermometer were
connected. 0.025 mole of bromobenzene were added thought tip on the top of
cooler in 15 minutes and then it were shaked at the temperature 50-550
C. after perfect addition occur, the temperature was keep bellow 500
C until 30 minutes. Next boiling flask was cooled at room temperature, and then
the mixture was poured into beaker glass that was contained 50 mL of aquades.
Nitro-bromobenzene was filtered, and then it was washed by using cold water, than
the crystal was dried. After that, the crystal was moved into Erlenmeyer by
using 20 mL ethanol 95%. The crystal was heated until all crystal dissolve. It
mixture was cooled until room temperature, and then the crystal of
4-nitrobromobenzene was separated by filter paper. The crystal (I) was washed
by using cold alcohol. After that both of the mixture were mixed and then it
were heated until the volume is a one third, the mixture was cooled until room
temperature. Finally, the crystal was weighed. Since there was no capillary pipette in organic
laboratory, so melting point could not be checked. While only shape and colour
of solid were observed to determine the product.
RESULT AND DISCUSSION
In theoretical,
the electrophilic substitution reaction of bromobenzene produces 4 – bromonitrobenzene. While the
nucleophilic substitution reaction of tert-butyl alcohol is tert-butyl
chloride. The reaction mechanism is as follow.
Formation of electrophile
Reaction of electrophile
Releasing of H+
Nucleophilic substitution is like follow
:
Nucleophilic
Substitution Reaction
According to Oxford University Chemical Safety Data, tert-butyl
chloride have some properties are colorless liquid, stable and extremely
flammable. It has melting point of 50 – 52oC and refractive index of
1.3828. It is soluble in most organic solvents; almost
insoluble in water.
In this
experiment, the result has similar physical properties of tert-butyl chloride.
It is colorless
liquid, soluble in alcohol but slightly soluble in water. Therefore,
the product of the nuchleophilic substitution reaction is tert-butyl chloride. The
volume of product obtained is 2.8 mL. Theoretically, it should be 5.0 mL.
The volume is less than theory. It may
because the reaction did not occur perfectly as the mixture of tert-buthyl
alcohol and HCl was not shaken well.
Eletrophilic
Substitution Reaction
According to
database of CAS (Chemical Abstact Service) , 4– bromonitrobenzene is a yellow
powder, insoluble in water and it has melting point of 124 – 126oC.
In this
experiment, the result has similar physical properties of 4– bromobenzene. It
is pale yellow powder and insoluble in water. While chemical properties was also
observed. Smoke test was conducted and produced white smoke. It indicated that
the product is aromatic. Thus, the product of the electrophilic substitution
reaction is 4-bromonitrobenzene. The mass of product obtained is 3.6 gram. In
theoretical, the mass of product should be 5.075 gram according to following equation:
Mole 4-bromonitrobenzen = mol bromobenzen = 0,025 mol.
Mass 4-bromonitrobenzen = 0,025
mol x 203 g/mol = 5.075 gram.
The percentage
of error in this experiment can be calculated by
The error was
occurred may be caused by imperfectly cooling which cause decreasing of the
amount of electrophile and product as well as the mixture of bromobenzene and
NO2+ was not shaken well.
CONCLUSION
Based on the
experiment it can be concluded that nucleophilic reactions of tertiary butanol
resulted colorless tertiary buthyl chloride. Electrophilic reaction of
bromobenzene resulted 4-bromonitrobenzene. Tertiary-butyl chloride result is 2.8 mL, the crystal of 4-bromonitrobenzene
resulted from substitution reactions of bromobenzene is 3.6 gram with %
of rendement is 70.94% and percentage of error is 29.06%
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Firstly, writer is grateful to the God,
for the unlimited knowledge was created. Then, thanks for lecture Mr. I Nyoman
Tika, M.Si who teach Organic Experiment subject. Thank for the laboratory
assistant, Mr. Lasia who guides the writer in conducting experiment and give
information how to work safely. Also thanks, the lecture assistant, Mrs. Dewi
who guides the writer in conducting experiment. Moreover, the last for all
members of VA class who give great motivation to the writer.
REFERENCES
L.G.
Wade, J. (2010). Organic Chemistry. Upper Saddle River: Pearson
Eduation, Inc.
Muderawan, I
Wayan dan I Wayan Suja. 2008. Praktikum
Kimia Organik. Singaraja :Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha
Nurlita,Frieda dan I Wayan Suja.2004.Buku Ajar
Praktikum Kimia Organik.Singaraja : IKIP Negeri Singaraja
Ratcliff
et al. 2004. AS Level and A Level Chemistry. UK: Cambridge University Press.
Anonymous. Tert-butyl
Chloride. Accessed at 1st October 2013 from
Anonymous. Tert-butyl
Chloride Accessed at 1st October 2013 from http://chemindustry.ru/tert-Butyl_Chloride.php
Anonymous.
1-Bromo-4-Nitrobenzene. Accessed at 2nd
October 2013 from http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/aldrich/167150?lang=en®ion=ID
1 komentar:
ry buthyl chloride. Electrophilic reaction of bromobenzene resulted 4-bromonitrobenzene. Tertiary-butyl chloride result
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