but do they do this all the time? Huh See e.g. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ol070673n - annoyingly I've just finished a temporary contract and no longer have access to mainstream literature Angry.
Are the conclusions in this paper valid for a wide range of alkenes, or just special ones - can't tell much from the supplementary info
sorry, but I dont think so ! In this paper, only study about tetramethylethylenechloronium and tetramethylethylenebromonium ions, you shouldn't envelop for a wide range of alkenes !
I think, for structure of intermediates of electrophilic addition reactions alkenes, each case has a evident experiment separately !
Two of the principal points at issue in the description of the mechanism for a given reaction are:
1. Is there a discrete positively charged intermediate, or is the addition concerted !?
2. If there is a positively charged intermediate, is it a carbocation or a bridged halonium ion ?
For brominations, anti addition is preferred for alkenes that do not have substituent groups that sould strongly stabilize a carbocation intermediate. When the alkene is conjugated with an aryl group, the extent of syn addition becomes greater, and syn addition can become the dominant pathway.
Chlorination is not as stereospecific as bromination, but it tends to follow the same pattern.
A freely rotating open carbocation would be expected to give both the syn and anti addition products. If the principal intermediate were an ion pair that collapsed faster than rotation about the C-C bond, syn addition could predominate.
Whether a bridged intermediate or a carbocation is involved in bromination depends primarily on the stability of the potential cation. Aliphatic systems normally go through the bridged intermediate, but styrenes are borderline cases. When the phenyl ring has electron – releasing sutstituents, there is sufficient stabilization to permit carbocation formation, whereas electron-attracting groupos favor the bridged intermediate. As a result, styrenes with electron-attracting substituents give a higher proportion of the anti addition product.
Substituent effects on addition reactions of stilbenes also give insight into the role of bridged in versus nonbridged carbocation intermediates. The compounds react with second-order kinetics in protic solvent. In aprotic solvents, stilbene give clean anti addition, but 4,4’-dimethoxystilbene give a mixture of the syn and anti addition products, indicating a carbocation intermediate. In nucleophilic solvents, solvent competes with bormide, but anti stereoselectivity is still observed, except in the case of stilbenes with donor substituents.
Chlorine would be expected to be a somewhat poorer bridging group than bromine because it is less polarizable and more resistant to becoming positively charged
Additional, you can read more about the electrophilic reaction between alkenes with peroxy-acid to form epoxide ...
and:
I guess hyperconjugation gives a more significant stabilizing effect.
yes, I agree with u !
Best regard !