The majority of the questions on my upcoming exam will be in this fashion. We will be given a substrate, reagent, and solvent and asked to find the product of the reaction. The unfortunate part is that they are only taking one answer as the correct answer so we have to consider all aspects of the reaction to give the one with the best yield (chemistry is serious here at GaTech). The steps I have been taking to complete these are as follows (please correct any inaccuracies):
1. Look at the substrate, particularly the alpha carbon. A methyl, primary, or secondary carbon attached to the halide will follow bimolecular mechanisms (when I had tried the reaction above I had not finished the chapter yet so I did not consider the possible E2 reaction). Tertiary carbons will follow unimolecular mechanisms or E2 reactions.
2. We then look at the size of the reagent. A small unhindered base/nucleophile will react primarily by substitution, and larger hindered reagents will follow eliminations.
3. The next factor is temperature. High temperatures promote elimination mechanisms (E1 and E2).
4. Then I will consider basicity and polarizability of the reagent. Strong, slightly polarized bases will increase the likelihood of elimination, while weakly basic highly polarized bases will support substiution.
5. Lastly, we look at the solvent. Now I know that aprotic solvents favor bimolecular reactions. They don't talk about elimination or substitution but am I safe to assume that aprotic solvents favor both S
N2 and E2? And protic solvents favor S
N1 and E1? Or does it not matter with elimination?
Now, those rules will, for our applications, apply mostly to just bimolecular reactions. We have learned that tertiary halides are the only substrates that follow unimolecular pathways since they have to form a carbocation intermediate that has to be relatively stable. The general rule given in the textbook is that substitution is favored in most unimolecular reactions. E1 reactions are only favored at very high temperatures and if elimination is desired it is better to use a strong base to encourage E2 over E1 or S
N1. No S
N2 reactions occur for tertiary substrates.
After all of these factors, another issue I am having is which take precedence over others? If I have factors that favor either how do I know if a reaction follows substitution more than elimination?
This is the next reaction I am going to try:
Hopefully this long post doesn't scare people away but I love chemistry and I am really hoping to learn as much as possible. I don't care too much about grades but when I graduate I want to be able to impress with knowledge more than GPA so I would love to get more insight from the higher intellect here. Thank you.