CHEM 0310 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Protic Solvent, Solvolysis, Rate-Determining Step

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6 Feb 2017
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Sn2 reactions diminishes when the reacting center changes from primary tertiary. This is only true for bimolecular substitution; secondary and tertiary undergo substitution but with another mechanism: unimolecular substitution (sn1) This occurs when the substrate undergoes substitution by solvent molecules (solvolysis) Unlike bimolecular reactions, primary halides are very slow in their reactions with water while tertiary is very fast. In contrast to sn2, solvolyses follows first order rate law, are not stereospecific, and are characterized by the opposite order of reactivity. The rate of a sn2 reaction depends on both ingredients while the rate of hydrolysis of the substrate is proportional to the concentration of only the starting halide, not the water; rate = k[starting] The observed rate is that of the slowest step in the sequence or rds. The number on in this substitution refers to only one molecule, haloalkane, participating in the rds.

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