Here is an post-mortem analysis / "how to" for the FINAL. The questions are split by the sections. At the start of each section are a few suggestions of what to look for or how to tackle the question type.
Qu1: A
The main factors for carbocation are degree of substitution (more alkyl
groups = more stable due to hyperconjugation) and resonance. Here i
is
a simple benzylic system with resonance stabilisation by the p
bonds. ii is 2o and iii is a phenyl cation,
which
is NOT stabilised by resonance (due to the spatial arrangement of the
orbitals),
in fact the phenyl cation is less stable than a 1o. So
overall,
i
> ii > iii
Qu2: AB
Nucleophilicity requires that we look a the availability of the
electrons.
Here all 3 systems are negatively charged O atoms, butin i
there
is resonance that will delocalise the charge to the second
electronegative
O atom making the electrons less available. In ii there
is
resonance again, but less effective, spreading the charge to C atoms.
Finally
the simple alkoxide is unstabilised and is the most reactive (note that
the same trend would apply for basicity is this case), so iii >
ii
> i
Qu3: E
Acidity means looking at the stability of the conjugate bases, but
first we should identify which atom is going to become negative by
locating
the most acidic H in each case. In i we have an alcohol OH, ii
is an amine NH and iii is a thiol SH. So the negative charge
will
be on these heteroatoms. S and O are in the same group of the periodic
table, but one row lower, this makes it larger which means that the
anionic
charge is more dispersed (and the SH bond is weaker) compared to the O
system, so the thiol SH is more acidic. O is more electronegative than
N meaning the O will stablise the anion more so the alkoxide is more
stable
than the amide ion. So iii > i > ii
Qu4: B
After drawing them out, count p bonds and
rings. Benzene has an IHD of 4 = 1 ring + 3 C=C and cyanocyclobutane
has
IHD = 3 = 1 ring + 2 CN p bonds. For the formula,
either carefully draw an example then count or treat the halogen like
an
H (well they both have one bond) and ignore the O (since it forms two
bonds,
it doesn't matter if it is there or not, the same number of H are
needed)
IHD = 1/2 ( 2 x 8 + 2 - 13 -1) = 2.....so i > iii >
ii
Qu5: E
Each type of C will give a single line in the broadband decoupled C
nmr... i has 2 types (CH3 and the tertiary C), ii
has only a single type of C and iii has 3 types (CH3,
ArC with the CH3 and the ArC with H). So iii
>
i
> ii
Qu6: A
Alcohols react with hydrogen halides to give alkyl halides in a
nucleophilic
substitution reaction via an SN1 type of reaction and so proceed via
the
carbocation intermediate. Since i is a tertiary alcohol,
it
will react fastest, ii is secondary then iii is a
phenol
and will not react at all (the phenyl cation is not favourable, since
Qu
1). Overall, i > ii > iii
Qu7: AB
Coupling in H nmr is dictated by the number of neighbours of a
different
type.... In i ethane, the two methyl groups are equal, so no
coupling
is observed and we see a single line for the single type of H
present.
In ii the methylene is split into 4 lines due to the 3 adjacent
H and in iii the methine shows as 7 lines since there are 6
adjacent
H. Therefore iii > ii > i
Qu8: C
Reaction conditions favour an SN2 reaction (F- = good
nucleophile
in polar aprotic solvent like DMSO) so steric factors and leaving
groups.
The ethyl bromide is primary and therefore unhindered and has the best
leaving group and so will be the most reactive. 2-chloropropane is
next,
more hindered, poorer LG and finally the methanol with the very poor
LG,
HO-. Therefore ii > i > iii
Qu9: AB
All are CC bonds but the hybridisation of the C atoms is changing and
so is the bond order. The C=C will be shortest, followed by the single
bond between the two sp2 hybridised (greater s character
implies
a smaller orbital) C in ii and finally the single bond between
the
two sp3 C in iii.
Qu10: AB
For radical chlorination there are two factors, the stability of the
radical (reactivity) but also the number of each type of H
(statistics).
Unlike radical brominations, the reaction does not always give the
product
from the more stable radical since the statistics can dictate the
outcome.
In this case, i is produced from 3 x 1o H, ii
from 2 x 2o H, and iii from 9 x 1o H
which
will dominate.... Therefore we get iii > ii >
i
Qu11: C
The Zaitsev product is the more stable alkene. Here we are looking
at elimination reactions proceeding via the E2 mechanism (we have a
strong
base), all the bases are alkoxides of different sizes.... larger bases
will tend to favour extracting the most accessible H which leads to the
anti-Zaitsev products..... in order of size we have methoxide <
ethoxide
< t-butoxide, so the yield of the Zaitsev product will favour ii
> i > iii
Qu12: B
Boiling points are controlled by intermolecular forces. The stronger
these forces the more energy is required to separate the molecules, the
higher the boiling point. i is an alcohol and will have
hydrogen
bonding, the strongest intermolecular force. ii is more
branched
than iii which decreases the amount of surface contacts so
reducing
the intermolecular forces, so we have i > iii > ii
Qu13: D
The more alkyl group substituents on the C=C then the more stable the
alkene (due to polarisability of alkyl groupsand hyperconjugation). The
more stable the alkene, then the less exothermic its heat of
hydrogenation
will be. i has 1 alkyl group, ii has 3 (most
stable)
and iii has 2, so ii > iii > i.
Qu14: AB
Good leaving groups are the conjugate bases of strong acids. So we
need to look at H2O, HCl and TsOH or the stability of HO-,
Cl- and TsO- : HO- is a very
poor
leaving group, whereas tosylate (TsO-) is very good since
the
charge is delocalised to 2 other electronegative O atoms. So iii
> ii > i.
Qu15: C
Calculate the yield from the question data. We have 10 mmol of
aminophenol,
and we get 7.5 mmol of product corresponding to 7.5 mmol x 151 g.....
Qu16: DE
False statements: A the Lucas test favours the SN1 reaction. B
secondary
alcohols oxidise to ketones and C sulphuric acid did not oxidise the
alcohol,
it caused elimination.
Qu17: C
False statements: A bromine reacts with the alkene. B bromine in
chloroform
is dark red / brown. D no there is no leaving group to be substitution,
it is an addition. E where does the Na come from ?, no precipitate
forms.
Qu18: A
False statements: B NaI is soluble in acetone (covalent character).
C it is an SN2 reaction. D under SN2 reactions, primary systems react
fastest.
E Br is a better LG.
Qu19: ABDE
False statement: C the silver nitrate enhances the LG ability of the
halogen by causing it to precipitate as the silver halide salt.
Qu20: E
Thionyl chloride, SOCl2 will cause substitution of the
alcohol
to the alkyl chloride which will undergo an elimination reaction with
the
bulky t-butoxide via an E2 reaction to give the anti-Zaitsev alkene E.
Qu21: A
Tosyl chloride with a base (removes HCL by-product) is used to convert
an alcohol into a tosylate which is a better leaving group. Then we do
an SN2 with inversion to give A.
Qu22: C
Radically brominate the tertiary position giving the alkyl bromide
then E2 elimination to the alkene by loss of the Br and an adjacent H
giving
C.
Qu23: B
Reaction of an alcohol with a strong acid.... protonate the -OH to
make the better leaving group, H2O, loss of the LG to the
carbocation....
watch for the rearrangement, then loss of the proton to complete the E1
elimination giving the more stable alkene, B.
Qu24: B
In order to get an E2 reaction to give this product, the LG must have
been trans to the methyl group in the reactive conformation. The LG was
the tosylate prepared from the alcohol with the same stereochemistry
(since
the C-O bond is not broken during the formation of the tosylate)....
this
is B. A would give the enantiomeric alkene, C and D can both eliminate
to give 1-methylcyclohexene.
Qu25: D
The product is a ether... so look for an intramolecular Williamson
type reaction .... an alcohol and an alkyl halide, but pay attention to
the stereochemistry of the SM , the SN2 inversion, and use the
stereochemistry
of the product (methyl groups trans) to help.....
Qu 26: D
Cyanide is introduced via an SN2 reaction of the bromide.... which
was obtained by the substitution of the appropraite -OH (location of
the
functional group).
Qu 27: C
Another intramolecular Williamson... need an alcohol and an alkyl
halide
with 5 C atoms.... this can be obtained from C. First the better
leaving
Br is replaced by I then the I is replaced by the HO- giving
an alcohol and an alkyl halide. Under these basic conditions the
cyclisation
to give a favourable 6 membered ring can occur.
Note that since -OH is a poor leaving group, it will not react with
iodide to create an alkyl halide, nor will it cyclise to give an
ether.
In D, the fluoride is too poor a leaving group to be suitable.
Qu28: E
Need to do an anti-Zaitsev elimination, so best to use a strong, bulky
base system, KOtBu / DMSO / heat after first converting the alcohol to
the tosylate. Using TsCl then KOH or acid / heat will give the Zaitsev
alkene.
Qu29: A
Need to do a Zaitsev elimination, this can be most readily achieved
by using acid and heat.
Qu30: C
An ether synthesis.... convert the alcohol to the more reactive
alkoxide
with a base then add the alkyl halide. Rule out some of the other
options
by remembering that OH is a poor leaving group. Option D will
give
the wrong stereochemistry since the tosylate will have the same
stereochemistry
as the starting alcohol (since the C-O bond is not changed.... review
the
mechanism) then the OTs is displaced via an SN2 reaction as so it
inverted.
Thus D gives the enantiomer of the desired product.
Qu31: D
To get the bromide in the right place, we must use a radical
chlorination
(there are 9 primary H to be replacerd vs 1 tertiary) then a
nucleophilic
substitution.
Qu32: D
To get the extra double bond we need to first introduce a LG then carry
out the elimination. So use radical bromination which will add
the
Br at the allylic position adjacent to the C=C.
Qu33: C
An SN2 reaction will be best.... SN1 with HBr would give a
rearrangement
(1,2-hydride shift) and lead to 2-bromo-2-methylbutane.
Qu34: AC
SN1 nucleophilic substitution reactions proceed via carbocations. SN2
do not have an intermediate.
Qu35: BC
A reaction where all the changes occur at the same time is a concerted
reaction, otherwise it is a stepwise reaction.
Qu36: C
This is the product predicted by Zaitsev's rule.
Qu37: BD
This is the definition of a leaving group.
Qu38: CD
E2 reactions occur best when the LG and the H are at 180o to each other
in the antiperiplanar geometry.
Qu39: CE
SN2 reactions are slow for tertiary substrates because the alkyl groups
block the attack of the nucleophile (steric effects).
Qu40: AD
A species with an unpaired electron is a radical. Carbanions and
carbocations
have only paired electrons.
Qu41: A
Named after is discoverer, the Walden inversion.
Qu42: AC
The rate determining step of an E1 reaction is the loss of the leaving
group to give the carbocations.
Qu43: DE
Unpaired electrons means radicals, and these are formed via homolytic
processes.