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various steps having its variations similarly to the nucleophilic
substitutions. In all of the following cases, the reactions shown are [1,2]-
eliminations, meaning that the reaction implicates electron movement
between two vicinal carbons. Other types of eliminations may occur
involving more distant carbon atoms and heteroatoms ‒ [1,3] in
decarboxylations or [1,4] in aldol condensations (Chapter 1.1.4.6).
1.1.4.4.1 E1 ‒ Unimolecular Elimination
An E1 reaction mechanism occurs when a relatively stable carbocation
may be formed by elimination of a stable anion (X-), such as a chloride
ion (Cl-) for a good leaving group. The only rate determining (slow) step
is the dissociation of the leaving group to form a carbocation (hence a
unimolecular reaction). A base (B) captures the proton released from
one carbon away of the carbocation formed in the E1 reaction
mechanism. It is worthy to note that the E1 mechanism competes with
the SN1 mechanism since the nucleophile (B) may react directly at the
halogenated carbon (substitution) or at the neighbouring hydrogen
atom (elimination). Steric hindrance both at the base and at the
carbocation, as well as stronger bases promote elimination.
Scheme 1.1.16: General E1 reaction mechanism.
1.1.4.4.2 E2 ‒ Bimolecular Elimination
Scheme 1.1.17: General E2 reaction mechanism.
E2 mechanisms occur through a concerted transfer of a set of electron
pairs from the base to the more electronegative group (X), the latter
leaving as its anion and a vicinal proton is transferred to the base
(Scheme 1.1.17). This mechanism is preferred if no stable ionic
Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Titel
- Biomedical Chemistry: Current Trends and Developments
- Autor
- Nuno Vale
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-046887-8
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 427
- Schlagwörter
- Physical Sciences, Engineering and Technology, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Green Chemistry
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Chemie