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Topic: Carbamate hydrolysis  (Read 11236 times)

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Offline laurag

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Carbamate hydrolysis
« on: May 13, 2010, 08:31:21 AM »
I'm looking at the differnet mechanisms by which base catalysed carbamate hydrolysis takes place. I know there are two mechanisms, the E1cB and the BAC2 and that the E1cB goes via an anionic intermediate and that the BAC2 mechanism goes via a tetrahedral intermediate and tends to only occur for carbamates without an N-H.
I've read that the E1cB mechanism is much faster than the BAC2 mechanism but I'm just not sure why. Why is the anionic intermediate favoured over the tetrahedral intermediate?

Thanks

Offline pacifyer

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Re: Carbamate hydrolysis
« Reply #1 on: May 13, 2010, 03:55:26 PM »
Primary carbamates (R1 or R2 = H) undergo hydrolysis via an E1cB type mechanism much faster than secondary carbamates, which hydrolyze via a BBAC2 mechanism.
The consequences are pretty different rates for both types...

Take a look at this:
http://web.viu.ca/krogh/chem331/HYDROLYSIS%202006.pdf

Hope it helps...

Offline laurag

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Re: Carbamate hydrolysis
« Reply #2 on: May 14, 2010, 04:50:55 AM »
Thanks.
I just don't understand why the E1cB mechanism is faster? Is it just that its easier to remove the H than it is for the -OH to attack the carbonyl?

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