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An arenium ion in organic chemistry is a cyclohexadienyl cation that appears as a reactive intermediate in electrophilic aromatic substitution. [1] For historic reasons this complex is also called a Wheland intermediate, after American chemist George Willard Wheland (1907–1976). [2] They are also called sigma complexes. [3]
This reaction type is linked to many forms of neighbouring group participation, for instance the reaction of the sulfur or nitrogen lone pair in sulfur mustard or nitrogen mustard to form the cationic intermediate. This reaction mechanism is supported by the observation that addition of pyridine to the reaction leads to inversion. The reasoning ...
The Wheland intermediate is the name typically given to the cationic reactive intermediate formed in electrophilic aromatic substitution, and can be considered an oppositely charged analog of the negatively charged Meisenheimer complex formed in nucleophilic aromatic substitution. Hence, the simultaneous occurrence of the Wheland and ...
The electrophilic Br-Br molecule interacts with electron-rich alkene molecule to form a π-complex 1. Forming of a three-membered bromonium ion The alkene is working as an electron donor and bromine as an electrophile. The three-membered bromonium ion 2 consisted of two carbon atoms and a bromine atom forms with a release of Br −.
A ball-and-stick model of a bromonium ion formed from cyclopentene. A halonium ion is any onium ion containing a halogen atom carrying a positive charge. This cation has the general structure R− + −R′ where X is any halogen and no restrictions on R, [1] this structure can be cyclic or an open chain molecular structure.
An unusually shifted product is formed because the intermediate undergoes heterolysis at the C 5-Cl position. [24] Electrophilic attack to allene groups. Adapted from. In the electrophilic attack of allenes, it takes place in a manner that prefers to form a terminal adduct and the vinyl cation at the central carbon.
An arenium ion is a cyclohexadienyl cation that appears as a reactive intermediate in electrophilic aromatic substitution. [28] For historic reasons this complex is also called a Wheland intermediate, [29] or a σ-complex. Two hydrogen atoms bonded to one carbon lie in a plane perpendicular to the benzene ring. [30]
Electrophilic aromatic substitution (S E Ar) is an organic reaction in which an atom that is attached to an aromatic system (usually hydrogen) is replaced by an electrophile. Some of the most important electrophilic aromatic substitutions are aromatic nitration , aromatic halogenation , aromatic sulfonation , alkylation Friedel–Crafts ...