3 Factors That Stabilize Carbocations
If electrons were
money, carbocations would be the beggars of organic chemistry.
Packing a mere
six valence electrons, these electron-deficient intermediates figure
prominently in many reactions we meet in organic chemistry, such as
§ nucleophilic substitution (SN1) and
elimination (E1) reactions
§ additions of electrophiles to double and
triple bonds
§ ,electrophilic aromatic substitution
§ additions to carbonyl compounds and enolate
chemistry (albeit in masked form)
Being
electron-deficient (and therefore unstable), formation of a carbocation is
usually the rate-limiting step in these reactions.
So what are some of
the factors that stabilize carbocations?
If you look through
all of your organic chemistry textbook, you’ll find 3 main structural factors
that help to stabilize carbocations.
1.
Neighboring carbon
atoms.
2.
Neighboring
carbon-carbon multiple bonds
3.
Neighboring atoms with
lone pairs.
Why is this? It all
goes back to the core governing force in chemistry: electrostatics. Since
“opposite charges attract, like charges repel”, you would be right in thinking
that carbocations
are stabilized by nearby electron-donating groups.
Let’s look at each of
these in turn.
1) Carbocations are stabilized by neighboring carbon atoms.
The stability of
carbocations increases as we go from primary to secondary to tertiary carbons.
There’s two answers as to why this is. The age-old answer that is still passed
around in many introductory textbooks points to carbons (alkyl groups in
particular) as being “electron-releasing” groups through inductive effects.
That is, a carbon (electronegativity 2.5) connected to hydrogen
(electronegativity 2.2) will be electron rich, and can donate some of those
electrons to the neighboring carbocation. In other words, the
neighboring carbon pays the carbocation with electrons it steals from the
hydrogens. The second, (and theoretically more satisfactory explanation) is hyoerconjugation, which invokes stabilization
through donation of the electrons in C-H sigma bonds to the empty p orbital of
the carbocation.
2) Carbocations are stabilized by neighboring carbon-carbon
multiple bonds. Carbocations adjacent
to another carbon-carbon double or triple bond have special stability because
overlap between the empty p orbital of the carbocation with the p orbitals of
the π bond allows for charge to be shared between multiple atoms.
This
effect, called “delocalisation” is
illustrated by drawing resonance structures where the charge “moves” from atom
to atom.
This is such a stabilizing influence that even primary carbocations –
normally very unstable – are remarkably easy to form when adjacent to a double
bond, so much so that they will actually participate in SN1 reactions.
3) Carbocations are stabilized by adjacent lone pairs. The key stabilizing influence is a neighboring
atom that donates a pair of electrons to the electron-poor carbocation.
Note
here that this invariably results in forming a double bond (π bond) and the charge will move to the
atom donating the electron pair.
Hence this often goes by the name of “π
donation”.
The strength of this
effect varies with basicity, so nitrogen and oxygen are the most powerful π
donors.
Strangely enough, even halogens can help to stabilize carbocations
through donation of a lone pair.
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