The IUPAC name numbers the position the methyl group relative to the -OH in cyclohexanol.
So 1-methyl means that the OH and CH3 are on the same carbon 2-methyl means that they are on adjacent carbons.
Oh, wow that is so simple. Thank you for the clear explanation.
You are essentially correct in your description of the mechanism but you haven't quite explained why this mechanism favors conversion of the tertiary alcohol over conversion of a secondary alcohol.
Hmm.. Well I think tertiary alcohols are favored in this mechanism because the intermediate R
3C radical is more stable than R
2CH radical and so on. However, I am unsure as to why Br almost exclusively bonds with tertiary carbons while Cl will bond with primary's and secondary's. My book writes about how the activation energy for a Br to substitute with an alcohol on a primary carbon is much higher than a Cl doing the same, but I don't know why there is such a large difference in their activation energies.
Edit: and to explain why R
3C radical is more stable than R
2CH radical, it is because the former has more of a spread out distribution for the radical because the R
3 core atoms pull on it. And also because the H's in the R
3 atoms share the charge. This is called hyper conjugation I believe.
Double Edit: I just realized that radicals are only an intermediate with Br
2 and Cl
2 reactions, not HBr and HCl. But I assume that the same idea still applies; The more R groups a carbocation has attached to it, the more stable it is. Therefore, tertiary carbons react more often than secondary and primary carbons. However, I still do not know why Br exclusively reacts with tertiary carbocations while Cl can react with secondaries.