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Arene substitution pattern
Position of molecules attached to benzene rings
Position of molecules attached to benzene rings
Arene substitution patterns are part of organic chemistry IUPAC nomenclature and pinpoint the position of substituents other than hydrogen in relation to each other on an aromatic hydrocarbon.
''Ortho'', ''meta'', and ''para'' substitution
- In ortho-substitution, two substituents occupy positions next to each other, which may be numbered 1 and 2. In the diagram, these positions are marked R and ortho.
- In meta-substitution, the substituents occupy positions 1 and 3 (corresponding to R and meta in the diagram).
- In para-substitution, the substituents occupy the opposite ends (positions 1 and 4, corresponding to R and para in the diagram). The toluidines serve as an example for these three types of substitution.
Synthesis
Electron donating groups, for example amino, hydroxyl, alkyl, and phenyl groups tend to be ortho/para-directors, and electron withdrawing groups such as nitro, nitrile, and ketone groups, tend to be meta-directors.
Properties
Although the specifics vary depending on the compound, in simple disubstituted arenes, the three isomers tend to have rather similar boiling points. However, the para isomer usually has the highest melting point, and the lowest solubility in a given solvent, of the three isomers.
Separation of ''ortho'' and ''para'' isomers
Because electron donating groups are both ortho and para directors, separation of these isomers is a common problem in synthetic chemistry. Several methods exist in order to separate these isomers:
- Column chromatography will often separate these isomers, as the ortho is more polar than the para in general.
- Fractional crystallisation can be used to obtain pure para product, relying on the principle that it is less soluble than the ortho and thus will crystallise first. Care must be taken to avoid cocrystallisation of the ortho isomer.
- Many nitro compounds' ortho and para isomers have quite different boiling points. These isomers can often be separated by distillation. These separated isomers can be converted to diazonium salts and used to prepare other pure ortho or para compounds.
''Ipso'', ''meso'', and ''peri'' substitution
Image:Ipso Substitution V.3.svg|ipso- substitution. Image:Meso Substitution V.1.svg|meso- substitution. Image:Peri Substitution V.1.svg|peri- substitution.
- Ipso-substitution describes two substituents sharing the same ring position in an intermediate compound in an electrophilic aromatic substitution. Trimethylsilyl, tert-butyl, and isopropyl groups can form stable carbocations, hence are ipso directing groups.
- Meso-substitution refers to the substituents occupying a benzylic position. It is observed in compounds such as calixarenes and acridines.
- Peri-substitution occurs in naphthalenes for substituents at the 1 and 8 positions.
''Cine'' and ''tele'' substitution
- In cine-substitution, the entering group takes up a position adjacent to that occupied by the leaving group. For example, cine-substitution is observed in aryne chemistry.
- Tele-substitution occurs when the new position is more than one atom away on the ring.
Etymology
Examples
Examples of the use of this nomenclature are given for isomers of cresol, C6H4(OH)(CH3): File:Ortho-cresol-2D-skeletal.png|o-cresol File:Meta-cresol-2D-skeletal.png|m-cresol File:Para-cresol-vertical-2D-skeletal.png|p-cresol
There are three arene substitution isomers of dihydroxybenzene (C6H4(OH)2) – the ortho isomer catechol, the meta isomer resorcinol, and the para isomer hydroquinone: File:Pyrocatechol.svg|catechol File:Resorcin.svg|resorcinol File:Hydrochinon.svg|hydroquinone
There are three arene substitution isomers of benzenedicarboxylic acid (C6H4(COOH)2) – the ortho isomer phthalic acid, the meta isomer isophthalic acid, and the para isomer terephthalic acid:
File:Phthalsäure.svg|phthalic acid File:Isophthalsäure.svg|isophthalic acid File:Terephthalsäure.svg|terephthalic acid
These terms can also be used in six-membered heterocyclic aromatic systems such as pyridine, where the nitrogen atom is considered one of the substituents. For example, nicotinamide and niacin, shown meta substitutions on a pyridine ring, while the cation of pralidoxime is an ortho isomer.
File:Niacin structure.svg|niacin File:Nicotinamid.svg|nicotinamide File:Pralidoxime-2D-skeletal.png|pralidoxime
References
References
- Morrison and Boyd, ''Organic Chemistry'', Allyn and Bacon Inc, Boston, 1959. Ch.9, p. 250.
- Morrison and Boyd, ''Organic Chemistry'', Allyn and Bacon Inc, Boston, 1959. Ch. 10, p. 290.
- Morrison and Boyd, ''Organic Chemistry'', Allyn and Bacon Inc, Boston, 1959. Ch. 21, pp. 573-574.
- "cine-substitution".
- "tele-substitution".
- Wilhelm Körner (1867) [https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/28090#page/176/mode/1up "Faits pour servir à la détermination du lieu chimique dans la série aromatique"] (Facts to be used in determining chemical location in the aromatic series), ''Bulletins de l'Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts de Belgique'', 2nd series, '''24''' : 166-185; see especially p. 169. From p. 169: ''"On distingue facilement ces trois séries, dans lesquelles les dérivés bihydroxyliques ont leurs terms correspondants, par les préfixes ''ortho''-, ''para''- et ''mêta''-."'' (One easily distinguishes these three series – in which the dihydroxy derivatives have their corresponding terms – by the prefixes ''ortho''-, ''para''- and ''meta''-.)
- Hermann von Fehling, ed., ''Neues Handwörterbuch der Chemie'' [New concise dictionary of chemistry] (Braunschweig, Germany: Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn, 1874), vol. 1, [https://books.google.com/books?id=X_gfAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1142 p. 1142.]
- Graebe (1869) [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x002457978;view=1up;seq=32 "Ueber die Constitution des Naphthalins"] (On the structure of naphthalene), ''Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie'', '''149''' : 20-28; see especially p. 26.
- Victor Meyer (1870) [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101044011672;view=1up;seq=649 "Untersuchungen über die Constitution der zweifach-substituirten Benzole"] (Investigations into the structure of di-substituted benzenes), ''Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie'', '''156''' : 265-301; see especially pp. 299-300.
- William B. Jensen (March 2006) "The origins of the ''ortho''-, ''meta''-, and ''para''- prefixes in chemical nomenclature," ''Journal of Chemical Education'', '''83''' (3) : 356.
- (2017-09-21). "Substitutionsmuster". Wikipedia.
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