Haloakanes And Haloarenes
Haloalkanes and Haloarenes: Concepts for JEE and CBSE Exams
- Nomenclature of haloalkanes and haloarenes:
- Haloalkanes are compounds in which one or more hydrogen atoms of an alkane are replaced by a halogen atom (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine).
- Haloarenes are compounds in which one or more hydrogen atoms of an arene (benzene or its derivatives) are replaced by a halogen atom.
- Classification of haloalkanes (primary, secondary, tertiary):
- Primary (1°): Only one carbon atom bonded to the halogen.
- Secondary (2°): Two carbon atoms bonded to the halogen.
- Tertiary (3°): Three carbon atoms bonded to the halogen.
- Preparation of haloalkanes:
- From alcohols: Reaction with hydrogen halides (HX).
- From alkenes: Electrophilic addition of hydrogen halides (HX).
- From alkanes: Free radical halogenation.
- Preparation of haloarenes:
- From benzene: Electrophilic aromatic substitution.
- From substituted benzenes: Further electrophilic aromatic substitution.
- Reactions of haloalkanes:
- Nucleophilic substitution
- Unimolecular (SN1) mechanism
- Bimolecular (SN2) mechanism
- Elimination (E1, E2)
- Addition
- Reactions of haloarenes:
-
Electrophilic aromatic substitution:
-
Nitration
-
Halogenation
-
Alkylation
-
Sulfonation
- Nucleophilic substitution reactions:
- SN1: Involves two steps (formation of carbocation intermediate).
- SN2: Substitution occurs in a single step.
- Elimination reactions:
- E1: Proceeds via carbocation and is more favourable.
- E2: Elimination in a single step.
- Applications of haloalkanes and haloarenes:
- Solvents
- Pharmaceuticals
- Pesticides
- Plastics
- Refrigerants
- Fire extinguishers