Organic chemistry has been giving me a headache this weekend! Hopefully, some of you will be able to help me.
According to my organic chemistry textbook (McMurry, 7th edition), during the mechanism of acid-catalyzed halogenation there's an elimination reaction that creates an enol intermediate. The enol then undergoes an addition reaction with the X
2. (For your reference, I attached a .png screenshot image of my textbook's mechanism.)
Here's where I'm confused. I was looking at Michigan State University's chemistry website, which shows an example of cyclohexanone reacting with Cl
2 with an acid (or base) catalyst. Right under that, is another example of (2S)-2-methyl-1-phenylbutan-1-one undergoing the same reaction. The webpage reads, "If the alpha-carbon is a chiral center, as in the second example [(2S)-2-methyl-1-phenylbutan-1-one], the products of halogenation and isotopic exchange are racemic."
Does not Cyclohexanone example result in racemization? Or is just one product formed, (2S)-2-chlorocyclohexanone or (2R)-2-chlorocyclohexanone? My textbook mentions the stereochemical descriptors Re and Si in another chapter, but not much. I'm wondering if there are maybe special considerations that need to be taken into account when considering Re face and Si face of sp2-hybridized carbon atoms on 6-carbon ring reactions?
Here's a link to Michigan State's website that I refer to:
http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/aldket2.htmThanks