- I know its methanol ;-) I Just brain-fried while typing. I don't think I mentioned methyloxide. I think I was talking about methanesulfonate.
You wrote:
IF IT WERE an SN2/E2, then the –OCH3 as a nucleophile would need to attack the 3’ carbon (kicking off the OSO2CH3, which I think is feasible because the Methane is a small molecule) and also the –OCH3 as a base would attack the hydrogen off the 2’ carbon making a double bond.
I assumed -OCH3 was methoxide ion,
-OCH
3- So the pKa of Methanol is 15.5...so doesn't that make the pKb of methanol = pKw/pKa = 14/15.5 = 0.9? Sorry about that...I just realized I had -0.9 not 0.9. Is 0.9 incorrect?
No, you've got confused here. K
a is not the same as pK
a.
K
aK
b = K
wpX = -logX, therefore -log(K
aK
b) = pK
w (= 14)
and it follows that: -logK
a -logK
b = pK
wand finally: pK
a + pK
b = pK
wSo, the classic misunderstanding now is that if we take methanol with pK
a 15.5 then apply the equation:
15.5 + pK
b = 14
and that for
methanol pK
b = -1.5
This implies that methanol is a strong base, around 10
5 times stronger than ammonia (pK
b 4.7), which is nonsense. So what is wrong?
The equation pK
a + pK
b = pK
w relates the pK
a of an acid to the pK
b of its
conjugate base.
i.e. the pK
a of methanol is 15.5, so we can say the pK
b of
methoxide (not methanol) is -1.5.
The pK
a of a compound is directly related to the pK
b of it's conjugate base, and likewise the pK
b of a compound is directly related to the pK
a of its conjugate acid. But, the pK
a of a compound is not related to the pK
b of the same compound. If a compound is a weak base, it does not mean it is a strong acid and vice versa - an example is methane, it is a very weak base but also a very weak acid.
a protic polar solvent favors SN1/E1 because it cages the nucleophile, preventing an SN2 style from attacking the carbon.
Essentially yes, but a protic solvent won't
prevent S
N2 it will just slow it down relative to S
N1.
My issue is that in this table:
The bottom line reads
"Solvent: Polar protic = favours SN1&2/E1&2", which is a direct contradiction of what you've just told me.
Q2: Assuming an E1 reaction is correct - after the LG (methanesulfonate) has left leaving the carbocation...why would it form more zaitsev product than hoffman product?
Is there a thermodynamic difference between the Zaitsev and Hoffman products? Which is the kinetically favoured product and which is the thermodynamically favoured product?