Everything about Nucleophilic totally explained
In
chemistry, a
nucleophile (literally
nucleus lover as in
nucleus and
phile) is a
reagent that forms a
chemical bond to its reaction partner (the
electrophile) by donating both bonding
electrons. Because nucleophiles donate electrons, they're by definition
Lewis bases (see
acid-base reaction theories). All
molecules or
ions with a free pair of electrons can act as nucleophiles, although negative ions (
anions) are more potent than neutral reagents. Neutral nucleophilic reactions with solvents such as
alcohols and water are named
solvolysis.
Nucleophiles may take part in
nucleophilic substitution, whereby a nucleophile becomes attracted to a full or partial positive charge on an element and displaces the group it's bonded to.
Nucleophilic is an
adjective that describes the affinity of a nucleophile to the nuclei, while
nucleophilicity or
nucleophile strength refers to the nucleophilic character. Nucleophilicity is often used to compare an atom's relative affinity to another's.
In general, in a row across the periodic table, the more basic the ion (the higher the pK
a of the conjugate acid), the more reactive it's as a nucleophile. In a given group,
polarizability is more important in the determination of the nucleophilicity: the easier it's to distort the electron cloud around an atom or molecule, the more readily it'll react.
for example, the
iodide ion (I
−) is more nucleophilic than the
fluoride ion (F
−).
An
ambident nucleophile is one that can attack from two or more places, resulting in two or more products. For example, the
thiocyanate ion (SCN
−) may attack from either the or the . For this reason, the
SN2 reaction of an alkyl halide with SCN
− often leads to a mixture of RSCN (an alkyl thiocyanate) and RNCS (an alkyl
isothiocyanate). Similar considerations apply in the
Kolbe nitrile synthesis.
The terms
nucleophile and
electrophile were introduced by
Christopher Kelk Ingold in 1929, replacing the terms
cationoid and
anionoid proposed earlier by
A. J. Lapworth in 1925.
Common examples
In the example below, the
oxygen of the hydroxide ion donates an electron to bond with the
carbon at the end of the
bromopropane molecule. The bond between the carbon and the
bromine then undergoes
heterolytic fission, with the bromine atom taking the donated electron and becoming the
bromide ion (Br
−): The picture is incorrect, because a Sn2 reaction occurs by backside attack. This means that the hydroxide ion attacks the carbon atom from the other side, exactly opposite the bromine ion.
Carbon nucleophiles
Carbon nucleophiles are alkyl metal halides found in the
Grignard reaction,
Blaise reaction,
Reformatsky reaction, and
Barbier reaction,
organolithium reagents and
anions of a
terminal alkyne.
Enols are also carbon nucleophiles. The formation of an enol is catalyzed by acid or base. Enols are ambident nucleophiles, but generally nucleophilic at the alpha carbon atom.
Enols are commonly used in condensation reactions, including the Claisen condensation and the aldol condensation reactions.
Oxygen nucleophiles
Examples of oxygen nucleophiles are
Water (H
2O) and
Alcohols.
Sulfur nucleophiles
Sulfur nucleophiles are
Thiols (HS
−).
Sulfur is generally very nucleophilic because of its large size, which makes it easily polarizable, and its lone pairs of electrons (in some cases).
Nitrogen nucleophiles
Nitrogen nucleophiles are
Ammonia,
Azide and
Amines.
Nucleophilicity scales
Many schemes have been devised attempting to quantify relative nucleophilic strength. The following
empirical data have been obtained by measuring
reaction rates for a large number of reactions involving a large number of nucleophiles and electrophiles and
linear regression. Nucleophiles displaying the so-called
alpha effect are usually omitted in this type of treatment.
Swain-Scott equation
The first such attempt is found in the so-called
Swain-Scott equation derived in 1953:
This
free-energy relationship relates the
pseudo first order reaction rate constant (in water at 25°C),
k, of a reaction, normalized to the reaction rate,
k0, of a standard reaction with water as the nucleophile, to a
nucleophilic constant n for a given nucleophile and a
substrate constant s that depends on the sensitivity of a substrate to nucleophilic attack (defined as 1 for
methyl bromide).
This treatment results in the following values for typical nucleophilic anions:
acetate 2.7,
chloride 3.0,
azide 4.0,
hydroxide 4.2,
aniline 4.5,
iodide 5.0 and
thiosulfate 6.4. Typical substrate constants are 0.66 for
ethyl tosylate, 0.77 for
β-propiolactone, 1.00 for
2,3-epoxypropanol, 0.87 for
benzyl chloride and 1.43 for
benzoyl chloride.
The equation predicts that in a
nucleophilic displacement on
benzyl chloride, the
azide anion reacts 3000 times faster than water.
Richie equation
The
Richie equation named after its creator and derived in 1972 is another
free-energy relationship:
or
where
N+ is the nucleophile dependent parameter and k
0 the
reaction rate constant for water. In this equation a substrate dependent parameter like s in the Swain-Scott equation is absent. The equation states that two nucleophiles react with the same relative reactivity regardless of the nature of the electrophile which is in violation of the
Reactivity–selectivity principle. For this reason this equation is also called the
constant selectivity relationship.
In the original publication the data were obtained by reactions of selected nucleophiles with selected electrophilic
carbocations such as
tropylium cations:
»
or
diazonium cations:
»
or (not displayed) ions based on
Malachite green. Subsequently many other reaction types were described.
Typical Richie
N+ values (in
methanol) are: 0.5 for
methanol, 5.9 for the
cyanide anion, 7.5 for the
methoxide anion, 8.5 for the
azide anion and 10.7 for the
thiophenol anion. The values for the relative cation reactivities are -0.4 for the malachite green cation, +2.6 for the benzenediazonium cation and +4.5 for the tropylium cation.
Mayr-Patz equation
In the Mayr-Patz equation (1994):
The
second order reaction rate constant k at 20°C for a reaction is related to a
nucleophilicity parameter N, an
electrophilicity parameter E and a
nucleophile-dependent slope parameter s. The constant s is defined as 1 with
2-methyl-1-pentene as the nucleophile.
Many of the constants have been derived from reaction of so-called benzhydrylium ions as the
electrophiles:
and a diverse collection of π-nucleophiles:
» .
Typical E values are +6.2 for R =
chlorine, +5.90 for R =
hydrogen, 0 for R =
methoxy and -7.02 for R =
dimethylamine.
Typical N values with s in parenthesis are -4.47 (1.32) for
electrophilic aromatic substitution to
toluene (1), -1.41 (1.12) for
electrophilic addition to 1-phenyl-2-propene (2) and 0.96 (1) for addition to 2-methyl-1-pentene (3), -0.13 (1.21) for reaction with triphenylallylsilane (4), 3.61 (1.11) for reaction with
2-methylfuran (5), +7.48 (0.89) for reaction with isobutenyltributylstannane (6) and +13.36 (0.81) for reaction with the
enamine 7.
The range of organic reactions also include
SN2 reactions:
With E = -9.15 for the
S-methyldibenzothiophenium ion, typical nucleophile values N (s) are 15.63 (0.64) for
piperidine, 10.49 (0.68) for
methoxide and 5.20 (0.89) for water. In short: nucleophilicities towards sp
2 or sp
3 centers follow the same pattern.
Unified equation
In an effort to unify the above described equations the Mayr equation is rewritten as:
[
with sE the electrophile-dependent slope parameter and sN the nucleophile-dependent slop parameter. This equation can be rewritten in several ways:]
- with sE = 1 for carbocations this equation is equal to the original Mayr-Patz equation of 1994,
- with sN = 0.6 for most n nucleophiles the equation becomes »
or the original Scott-Swain equation written as: »
- with sE = 1 for carbocations and sN = 0.6 the equation becomes: »
or the original Ritchie equation written as: »
Further Information
Get more info on 'Nucleophilic'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://nucleophile.totallyexplained.com">Nucleophile Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |