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Summary Aromatic Chemistry Notes - AQA Chemistry A Level

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Detailed notes of the Aromatic Chemistry topic for AQA Chemistry A Level Papers 2 and 3.

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Aromatic Chemistry
Structure of Beneze




 Benzene has the formula C6H6
 Its basic structure is 6 C atoms in a hexagonal ring, with one H atom bonded to each C atom
 The molecule is planar, and the 6 C-C bonds are the same length (intermediate between single
and double)
 Each C atom is bonded to two other C atoms and a H atom by single covalent bonds
 This leaves one unused electron on each C atom perpendicular to the plane of the ring
 The result is a ring of negative charge (electron cloud) above and below the plane of the ring
 The electrons in the electron cloud do not belong to a particular C atom, they are delocalised,
and thus repel each other less making the molecule more stable
 Kekule made a significant breakthrough and was the first chemist to realise that benzene had a
ring structure with 6 carbon atoms all joined to one hydrogen atom
o He, however, thought the ring contained three C=C double bonds and three C–C single
bonds




o
o This molecule would be a ‘triene’ with three C=C double bonds rather than a delocalised
ring system
 There are some key pieces of evidence that support the delocalised ring model rather than
Kekule’s triene model
o C–C bond length – all of the C–C bonds are the same length, and this length is
inbetween the length of C–C single bonds and C=C double bonds
o Addition reactions – benzene does not readily undergo addition reactions (no double
bonds) e.g. does not decolourise bromine water, whilst a triene would
o Enthalpy of hydrogenation – We would expect a triene to react with 3H 2 to form
cyclohexane, releasing 360kJ/mol of energy. Benzene, however, only released 208
kJ/mol of energy, showing that benzene is more stable than the triene due to the
delocalisation of electrons

Electrophilic Substitution
 Aromatic compounds are attacked by electrophiles (lone pair acceptors) as the aromatic ring is
very electron rich due to the cloud of electrons above and below the ring

,  They undergo substitution reactions where H atoms on the ring are replaced, but do not
undergo addition reactions as they would lose their delocalisation and extra stability in the
process

Nitration
 Reagent – Concentrated HNO3 and concentrated H2SO4
 50oC
 H atom on benzene ring is replaced by NO 2 (nitro) group
 Aromatic nitro compounds are used to make aromatic amines and explosives (TNT)
 Overall equation:




 Generation of electrophile (NO2+ nitronium ion):

HNO3 + 2H2SO4 -> NO2+ + 2HSO4– + H3O+

 Mechanism:




Friedel-Crafts Acylation
 Reagent – Acyl chloride or acid anhydride and AlCl 3
 Anhydrous to prevent reaction of AlCl3 with water (vigorous)
 H atom on benzene ring is replaced by RCO (acyl) group
 Product – Aromatic ketones
 Extremely useful in adding C atoms to aromatic rings, valuable in organic synthesis

Acyl Chloride
 Overall equation:




 Generation of electrophile:
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