Some points to consider:
1. It's unlikely that CO would react with benzene in the absence of a catalyst. So, how do HCl and AlCl3 promote reaction of CO with benzene in the bottom reaction sequence?
2. Does benzene suffer electrophilic or nucleophilic attack? Does benzene undergo substitution or addition as a result of reaction with CO + AlCl3 + HCl?
3. Does AlCl3 function as a Lewis acid or a Lewis base in this reaction?
4. Which reaction would be likely to proceed more rapidly: reaction of CO + HCl + AlCl3 with benzene or with xylene (i. e., 1,4-dimethylbenzene), each of which affords a single monoaldehyde product?
5. Aluminum chloride undergoes hydrolysis in water; what are the likely hydrolysis products?
1. HCl and AlCl
3 attacks CO which consequently gives the Carbon atom a positive charge, which then reacts with benzene undergoing electrophilic reaction.
2. From the above point possibly
Electrophilic Reaction, (I've read in a post that, Aryl groups mostly undergo Electrophilic reactions, but it can also undergo Nucleophilic Reaction, when the Nucleophile attacks a Hydrocarbon and the Carbon atom of this Hydrocarbon undergoes Electrophilic attack upon the Aryl group, (which is a manipulation of Electrophilic Reaction). But does that count here? )
In the mechanism, the hydrogen atom attached to the sp
2 hybridized Carbon of the Benzene gets detached while the CO,HCl,AlCl
3 derivative combines with that Carbon. So can we call it Substitution?
3. As 1,4-dimethylbenzene contains
Electron Donating groups (methyl-) it increases the nucleophilicity of the Carbon atom (which undergoes the attachment process) and hence xylene proceeds more rapidly. (Or am I wrong?)
4. Al
3+(aq) + 6H2O(l)
[Al(H2O)6]
3+(aq) . Is that right?
Thanks for your support
OrgXemProf