NOTICE:
I meant radicals rather than carbocations.
Curiously I looked for it in two books (Clayden "Organic Chemistry" and Boyd-Morrison "Organic Chemistry"). Both say that the tertiary radical obtained 36-37% output.
I'm also reading that percentage in other books.
I'm also noticing a similarity in rhetoric.
If the tertiary bond is weaker, then it should require less energy. And the need for less energy, means more stability.
Am I to assume that I'm suppose to only examine the relative reactivity from such experimental data?
For example, am I not suppose to consider primary, secondary, or tertiary radical stability when determining product output? Am I only to look for past experimental data that tabulates rate relativity in order to know the percentage of products that come out?
I thought stability was suppose to be the theoretical ground for determining experimental output. In other words, the theoretical understanding provides knowledge as to what product will overpower the other products and the reasons for doing so. The reasons would be intermediate stability versus the intermediate stability of other carbon radicals.
It seems that theory and experimental data do not coorelate. And being that the case, the theory seems disproved.