Hi,
I've attached the problem below (scroll down for it, 2nd post). Here's what I think (I've added a pic. of my synthesis),
In retrosynthesis, before adding sulfuric acid in water, you would have had an alkene. The double bond would have been terminal because after it plucked the proton from sulfuric acid, there would have been a carboncation on carbon-2, and then a hydride shift to put the carboncation on carbon-3.
Then before adding H2 in Lindlar's catalyst, you would have had hexyne. And before that (on the "?" stage) you would be adding 1-bromobutane to an ethyne ion with a lone pair.
The other possibilities are that after the first retrosynthetic step, there would be a carbocation on the 2- or 3-carbon, but this would give you more than one answer, because it would proceed in both directions.
But the answers say that the double bond was on the 2-carbon, why?
Thanks!
~Cooper
EDIT: The triple bonded carbons should have linear confirmation, sorry