Issue 0, 1971

Bromohydrin formation in aqueous dimethyl sulphoxide; electronic and steric effects

Abstract

The role of electronic and steric effects in the stereospecific trans-addition of the elements of hypobromous acid (HOBr) to a selected group of olefins, with moist dimethyl sulphoxide as solvent-reactant and N-bromosuccinimide as the source of bromine, has been examined. In the absence of severe steric restrictions, the electronic effects have been observed to direct the addition in a Markownikoff sense. Highly hindered olefins and those wherein the electron density at the carbon–carbon double bond is severely depleted by electron-withdrawing substituents fail to react. Similar systems which have shown a susceptibility to carbonium ion rearrangements in analogous reactions fail to yield, for the most part, rearranged products. The intermediate is deemed best represented by a bromonium ion, symmetrical or non-symmetrical, depending upon the structure of the starting olefin. If the addition of the elements of HOBr is retarded owing to electronic or steric effects, considerable amounts of dibromide accompany bromohydrin.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc. B, 1971, 85-89

Bromohydrin formation in aqueous dimethyl sulphoxide; electronic and steric effects

D. R. Dalton and V. P. Dutta, J. Chem. Soc. B, 1971, 85 DOI: 10.1039/J29710000085

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