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    Rearrangements and Pericyclic Reactions
    CHM-623
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    Topics
    1. Classification of Rearrangement2. Pinacol Pinacolon Rearrangement3. Benzil Benzilic Acid Rearrangement4. Rearrangements Involving Diazomethane5. Favorskii Rearrangement6. Hofmann Rearrangement7. Schmidt Rearrangement8. Lossen Rearrangement9. Bayer Villiger Rearrangement10. Benzidine Rearrangement11. Fries Rearrangement12. Sigma Tropic Rearrangement13. Migration of Carbon14. Cope Rearrangement15. Claisen Rearrangement16. Benzidine Rearrangement17. [1,3] Hydrogen Migration18. [1,5] Hydrogen Migration19. [1,7] Hydrogen Migration20. [1,9] Hydrogen Migration21. Pericyclic Reactions: Conrotatory and Disrotatory Motion of Orbital22. Electrocyclic Reactions23. Thermal Cyclization24. Photochemical Cyclization25. Hofmann Rule26. Fukui Theory of Frontier Orbitals27. Introduction to Cycloaddition Reactions28. Suprafacial and Antafacial Addition29. Woodward-Hofmann Rule30. Frontier Theory31. Mobius Huckel Theory for Thermal and Photochemical Cycloaddition Reaction
    CHM-623›Hofmann Rule
    Rearrangements and Pericyclic ReactionsTopic 25 of 31

    Hofmann Rule

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    Beginnerlevel

    Hofmann Rule

    The Hofmann Rule refers to a principle in organic chemistry that describes the selectivity in certain elimination reactions, specifically those that follow the Hofmann elimination. The rule is concerned with the elimination of amines or quaternary ammonium salts, resulting in the formation of alkenes.

    Hofmann Elimination Reaction

    The Hofmann elimination is a reaction in which a quaternary ammonium salt undergoes dehydrohalogenation to form an alkene, and the process involves the loss of the smallest possible alkyl group (which usually results in the formation of the least substituted, or most substituted alkene under certain conditions). This occurs through a bimolecular elimination mechanism, and the Hofmann Rule provides a prediction for the major product.

    Hofmann Rule Explanation

    The Hofmann Rule states that during the elimination of a quaternary ammonium ion, the major product is the alkene that results from the loss of the smallest alkyl group (often methyl) from the quaternary ammonium ion, resulting in the formation of the least substituted alkene (known as the Hofmann product).

    • Hofmann product: The alkene with the least substituted carbon (i.e., the more stable transition state due to the least steric hindrance).

    This contrasts with the Zaitsev rule, which predicts that in many elimination reactions (such as in the case of alkyl halides), the major product is the most substituted alkene (due to stability).

    Hofmann Elimination Mechanism

    1. Formation of a Quaternary Ammonium Ion:

      • The starting material is a quaternary ammonium salt (R₄N⁺X⁻), where the nitrogen atom is bonded to four groups (either alkyl or aryl).
    2. Base-Induced Deprotonation:

      • A strong base (such as bromine or potassium hydroxide (KOH)) is used to remove a hydrogen atom from the carbon adjacent to the nitrogen. This leads to the formation of a cyclic transition state.
    3. Formation of an Alkene:

      • The quaternary ammonium ion undergoes beta elimination, and the smallest alkyl group is eliminated, resulting in the formation of an alkene. The eliminated group is typically methyl (CH₃) when it leads to the least substituted, Hofmann product.

    Hofmann Rule vs. Zaitsev Rule

    • Zaitsev Rule: Predicts that the major product of an elimination reaction will be the most substituted alkene (the Zaitsev product). This is often the more stable alkene due to hyperconjugation and alkyl group electron-donating effects.

    • Hofmann Rule: Predicts the formation of the least substituted alkene (the Hofmann product), and it applies specifically to Hofmann elimination reactions involving quaternary ammonium salts. The mechanism tends to favor the less substituted alkene due to steric effects and the nature of the transition state.

    Thus, the Hofmann Rule overrides the Zaitsev Rule in the case of quaternary ammonium eliminations, resulting in a less substituted alkene as the major product.


    Example of Hofmann Elimination

    Consider the Hofmann elimination of a quaternary ammonium salt such as N,N,N-trimethylbutylammonium bromide (a quaternary ammonium salt):

    1. Starting material:

      • The quaternary ammonium salt has the structure: (CH₃)₃N⁺-CH₂CH₂CH₃ (bromide)\text{(CH₃)₃N⁺-CH₂CH₂CH₃ (bromide)}(CH₃)₃N⁺-CH₂CH₂CH₃ (bromide)
    2. Base-induced elimination:

      • A strong base (like KOH) is used to deprotonate the carbon adjacent to the nitrogen atom, leading to the formation of a cyclic transition state.
    3. Loss of the smallest alkyl group (methyl):

      • The methyl group (CH₃) is eliminated from the nitrogen atom, resulting in the formation of the less substituted alkene: CH₃-CH₂CH₂(least substituted alkene, Hofmann product)\text{CH₃-CH₂CH₂} \quad (\text{least substituted alkene, Hofmann product})CH₃-CH₂CH₂(least substituted alkene, Hofmann product)

    This results in the formation of the Hofmann product, which is propene, the least substituted alkene.


    Applications of Hofmann Rule

    1. Synthesis of Alkenes:

      • The Hofmann elimination is used to synthesize less substituted alkenes from quaternary ammonium salts, often when a Zaitsev elimination would result in an undesired more substituted product.
    2. Steric Effects in Reactions:

      • The Hofmann Rule helps in understanding steric effects in organic chemistry. In the Hofmann elimination, the bulky methyl group (or other smaller alkyl groups) leaves, resulting in less steric hindrance in the final product.
    3. Synthesis of Specific Alkenes:

      • The rule is especially useful when the formation of less substituted alkenes is desired, such as in the case of selective polymerization, functionalization of alkenes, or in pharmaceutical chemistry, where the desired substitution pattern is crucial.
    4. Synthesis of Azo Compounds:

      • In the preparation of azo compounds (used in dyes), the Hofmann elimination mechanism can be used to produce unsubstituted alkenes for further modification.

    Conclusion

    The Hofmann Rule governs the Hofmann elimination reaction, where quaternary ammonium salts undergo beta-elimination to produce the least substituted alkene as the major product. This rule contrasts with the Zaitsev Rule, which predicts the formation of the most substituted alkene in typical elimination reactions. The Hofmann elimination is especially important in organic synthesis, providing a selective method to form less substituted alkenes and showcasing the impact of steric effects in chemical reactions.

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    Fukui Theory of Frontier Orbitals

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