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Topic: Hell-Volhard-Zelinski reaction mechanism  (Read 4004 times)

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Offline Mandeep Deka

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Hell-Volhard-Zelinski reaction mechanism
« on: December 26, 2010, 07:16:37 AM »
In the HVZ reaction, after the alpha-brominated acyl-bromide is formed it gets hydrolyzed to alpha-brominated carboxylic acid which is the final product. But why doesn't the bromine at the alpha- carbon get substituted by an -OH group? It can undergo nucleophilic substitution for sure!!

Offline Trave11er

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Re: Hell-Volhard-Zelinski reaction mechanism
« Reply #1 on: December 26, 2010, 08:53:01 AM »
It probably does both, but substituion at carboxylic carbon is predominant, because 1.) It carries a bigger "+" charge and therefore more readily attracts the nucleophile (electrostatically) 2.) pi-antibonding orbital of carboxylic group C=O bond lies lower in energy than sigma-antibonding C-Br bond, so again substitution at alpha carbon shouldn't be the predominant reaction.

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