Free radical halogenation
In
chemistry free radical halogenation is a type of
halogenation. This
chemical reaction is typical of
alkanes and
alkyl-substituted
aromatics under application of heat or
UV light. The reaction is used for the industrial synthesis of
chloroform(CH
3Cl),
dichloromethane(CH
2Cl
2)
In the reaction of
methane and
chlorine:
The
initiation step generates
halogen radicals by
homolysis:
Cl
2 → 2 Cl
.followed by a
chain reaction:
CH
4 + Cl
. → CH
3. + HCl
CH
3. + Cl
2 → CH
3Cl + Cl
.The net reaction is:
CH
4 + Cl
2 → CH
3Cl + HCl.
The order of
reactivity of halogens is F
2 >> Cl
2 > Br
2 >> (I
2). The reactivities of these halogens in the halogenation process are however in reverse, since Fluorine molecules homolyse less readily than those of Iodine in the presence of UV light.
* Halogenation often does not stop at monosubstititution, depending on reaction conditions the chlorination of methane yields
dichloromethane,
chloroform and
tetrachloromethane.
*In most
hydrocarbons more than one possible product exists depending on which hydrogen is replaced.
Butane (CH
3-CH
2-CH
2-CH
3), for example, can be chlorinated at the "1" position to give 1-chlorobutane (CH
3-CH
2-CH
2-CH
2Cl) or at the "2" position to give 2-chlorobutane (CH
3-CH
2-CHCl-CH
3). The product distribution depends on relative reaction rates: in this case the "2" position of butane reacts faster and 2-chlorobutane is the major product.
* Chlorination is generally less selective than bromination. Fluorination is not only even less selective than chlorination, but also highly
exothermic and care must be taken to prevent an explosion or a runaway reaction. This relationship is often used as a demonstration of the
reactivityâ€"selectivity principle and can be explained with the aid of the
Hammond postulate. A bromine radical is not very reactive and the
transition state for proton abstraction has much radical character and is reached late. the reactive chlorine radical develops a transition state resembling the reactant with little radical character. When the alkyl radical is fully formed in the transition state it can benefit fully from any
resonance stabilization present thereby maximizing selectivity.
* Free radical iodination is usually not possible because iodine is less reactive than the other halogens. Free radical halogenation generally proceeds in the following order:
*
Fastest**Carbons with one or more
aryl substituents (benzylic positions)
**Carbons with three
alkyl substituents (tertiary positions)
**Carbons with two alkyl substituents (secondary positions)
**Carbons with one or zero substituents (primary positions)
*
Slowest*
oxygen is a halogenation
inhibitor