Lecture 12 - Nucleophilic Participation During Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes. When electrophilic addition involves a localized carbocation intermediate, skeletal rearrangement sometimes occurs, but it can be avoided when both alkene carbons are involved in
an unsymmetrical 3-center-2-electron bond, as in Markovnikov hydration via alkoxymercuration followed by reduction. Similarly a reagent that attacks both alkene carbons simultaneously by providing a nucleophilic component during electrophilic attack can avoid rearrangement,
as in reactions that proceed via three-membered-ring halonium intermediates. Simultaneity in making two bonds during formation of cyclopropanes from carbenes can be demonstrated using stereochemistry. Anti-Markovnikov hydration can be achieved via hydroboration followed
by oxidation with hydroperoxide. Rearrangement of the borane hydroperoxide intermediate with frontside C-O bond formation shows close orbital analogy to backside attack during SN2 substitution. Again syn-addition shows that nucleophilic attack occurs simultaneously
with electrophilic attack on the alkene. (from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 12 - Nucleophilic Participation During Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes
Time
Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00]
1. Forming Unrearranged Alcohols via Hydroxymercuration
[00:07:36]
2. Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes with Nucleophilic Participation: Halonium Ions
[00:24:56]
3. Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes with Nucleophilic Participation: Carbenes
[00:36:55]
4. Anti-Markovnikov Hydration via Hydroboration and Oxidation