I have some doubts about this reaction in acid catalysis
Here the text I read:
Why if I add a second equivalent of Br
2 I'll have the attack on the other α-carbon (the one not brominated in tjebfrist "step") and not on the same one??
When I add the second equivalent the rate determining step is the deprotonation of the H bonded to a C
α of bromoketone by a weak base (pH acid)
Now a C
α with:
- hydrogen but also a bromine atom has its hydrongen more acidic than another C
α without an halide bonded.
And a more acidic hydrogen means that the base can attack the H
+ more easily.
So why the second bromination doesn't occour on the same C
α of the first halogenation?
Thanks!!