Basically I'm working on drawing up the mechanism for the addition of iodine monochloride to 1-methyl-1-cyclopentene.
My answer is that the double bond of the alkene attacks the iodine. I assume the reason for this is because the Iodine is "POLARIZABLE". My first assumption was that the double bond would attack the Chlorine in the first place, since Iodine's electronegativity makes it partially positive, and the negative normally goes after the positive. But since my professor said the yielded product was 1-chloro-2-iodo-1-methylcyclopentane, the double bond HAS to go after the iodine. The iodine forms a bridge on one side of the molecule when it is added, then the chlorine attacks the more substituted position and bears the correct product. So I assume that my answer is correct for going after the Iodine first, but I fail to understand WHY exactly it would happen that way.
Suggestions? Clarification?