Jump to content

Arene substitution pattern

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 209.139.255.245 (talk) at 23:10, 10 October 2006 (fixed run-on sentence). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Arene substitution patterns are part of organic chemistry IUPAC nomenclature and pinpoint the position of substituents other than hydrogen in relation to each other on an aromatic hydrocarbon.

Arene substitution patterns
Arene substitution patterns

In ortho-substitution, two substituents share positions next to each other and in meta-substitution the substituents occupy positions 1 and 3. In para-substitution, the substituents occupy the opposite ends (positions 1 and 4). The toluidines serve as an example for this type of substitution.

In special cases, ipso-substitution describes two substituents sharing the same ring position in an intermediate compound in an electrophilic aromatic substitution. Meso-substitution is observed in compounds such as calixarenes and acridines and refer to the substituents occupying a benzylic position.

peri substitution
peri substitution

In naphthalenes, substitution specifically in the 1 and 8 positions is called peri-substitution.


Two additional terms related to substitution processes are cine-substitution in which the entering group takes up a position adjacent to that occupied by the leaving group for example observed in aryne chemistry and tele-substitution when the new position is more than one atom away on the ring[1]

Origins

The meanings of the prefixes ortho, meta and para are all derived from Greek: respectively meaning straight or correct, following or after and akin to or similar. The relationship to the current meaning is perhaps not obvious. The ortho description was historically used to designate the original compound and an isomer was often called the meta compound, see for instance the trivial names orthophosphoric acid and trimetaphosphoric acid having nothing to do with aromats at all. Likewise the description para was reserved for just closely related compounds. Thus Berzelius originally called the racemic form of aspartic acid paraaspartic acid (another obsolete term: racemic acid) in 1830. The use of the descriptions ortho, meta and para for multiple substituted aromatic rings starts with Wilhelm Körner in the period 1866–1874 although he chose to reserve the ortho prefix for the 1,4 isomer and the meta prefix for the 1,2-isomer. The current nomenclature (different again from that of Körner) was introduced by the Chemical Society in 1879 [2].

References

  1. ^ Gold Book definitionLink.
  2. ^ The Origins of the Ortho-, Meta-, and Para- Prefixes in Chemical Nomenclature, William B. Jensen, Journal of Chemical Education • Vol. 83 No. 3 March p. 356 2006