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What is the Friedel-Crafts alkylation reaction?

Here’s a explanation of the Friedel-Crafts alkylation reaction:


What It Is

  • Friedel-Crafts alkylation is a reaction where an alkyl group (a carbon chain) is introduced into a benzene ring.
  • It is a type of electrophilic aromatic substitution, meaning the benzene ring substitutes a hydrogen atom with an alkyl group.

Step 1: Formation of the Electrophile

  • The alkyl group is usually provided by an alkyl halide (like methyl chloride or ethyl chloride).
  • A Lewis acid catalyst (like AlCl₃) is used to generate a positively charged alkyl species (carbocation), which acts as the electrophile.

Step 2: Attack on the Benzene Ring

  • The electron-rich benzene ring attacks the alkyl carbocation.
  • This forms a temporary sigma complex (arenium ion) where the ring loses its aromaticity temporarily.

Step 3: Restoration of Aromaticity

  • A hydrogen atom is removed from the carbon that bonded to the alkyl group.
  • This restores the aromatic character of the benzene ring.
  • The final product is an alkyl-substituted benzene.

Key Points

  1. Alkyl groups activate the ring, making it more reactive for further substitutions.
  2. The reaction requires a Lewis acid catalyst to generate the carbocation.
  3. Rearrangement of the carbocation can occur, sometimes leading to unexpected products.

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