1) Reaction Mechanism – Basic Terms
- Substrate: Part of reactant which is under attack.
- Reagent: Part of reactant which attacks the substrate.
- Mechanism: Stepwise description of bond breaking and bond formation.
- General path: Substrate + Reagent → Transition State → Intermediate → Product
2) Types of Reagents
Electrophiles
- Electron pair acceptors (Lewis acids).
- Examples: H⁺, CH₃⁺, AlCl₃, BF₃.
Nucleophiles
- Electron pair donors (Lewis bases).
- Examples: OH⁻, NH₃, H₂O, CN⁻.
Free Radicals
- Species with at least one unpaired electron.
- Examples: H·, CH₃·, Cl·.
3) Bond Cleavage (Fission)
Homolytic Fission
- Bond electrons divided equally.
- Forms two free radicals.
- Favoured by non-polar bonds, high temperature, light or radical initiators.
Heterolytic Fission
- Bond electrons taken by one atom.
- Forms ions (cation + anion).
- Favoured by polar bonds and polar solvents.
4) Electronic Effects
Inductive Effect (I)
- Permanent effect transmitted through σ-bonds.
- Decreases with distance.
- –I groups: –NO₂, –COOH, –F, –Cl, –Br, –I.
- +I groups: Alkyl groups.
Mesomeric Effect (M)
- Permanent effect due to delocalisation of π-electrons.
- +M groups: –OH, –OR, –NH₂ (o/p directing, activating).
- –M groups: –NO₂, –CN, –CHO, –COOH (meta directing).
Electromeric Effect (E)
- Temporary effect in presence of attacking reagent.
- Complete transfer of π-electrons.
5) Resonance
- Delocalisation of electrons in conjugated systems.
- Actual structure is a resonance hybrid.
- More resonance structures → greater stability.
- Bond order = (Total bonds in all structures) / (No. of structures).
Conditions for Resonance
- Same arrangement of atomic nuclei.
- Same number of paired and unpaired electrons.
- Structures must have comparable energy.
- Atoms involved must be planar and follow octet rule.
6) Hyperconjugation (No-Bond Resonance)
- Interaction of σ-bond electrons with adjacent π-system.
- Requires sp³ carbon with at least one H attached to sp² carbon.
- Explains stability of carbocations and free radicals.
- Stability ∝ number of hyperconjugative structures.
7) Organic Reaction Intermediates
Free Radicals
- Formed by homolytic cleavage.
- sp² hybridised, planar.
- Stability: Allyl ≈ Benzyl > 3° > 2° > 1° > Methyl > Vinyl.
Carbocations
- Formed by heterolytic cleavage.
- Electron deficient.
- Stability: Allyl ≈ Benzyl > 3° > 2° > 1° > Methyl.
Carbanions
- Electron-rich species.
- sp³ hybridised, pyramidal.
- Stability increases with –I groups (–CN, –NO₂).
Carbenes
- Neutral species with incomplete octet.
- Obtained from diazomethane or ketenes.
- Exist as Singlet and Triplet.
8) Types of Organic Reactions
Addition Reactions
- Electrophilic addition
- Nucleophilic addition
- Free radical addition
Elimination Reactions
- α-elimination (forms carbene)
- β-elimination (forms alkene)
- γ-elimination (forms cyclic compound)
Substitution Reactions
- SN – Nucleophilic substitution
- SR – Radical substitution
- SE – Electrophilic substitution
Other Reactions
- Condensation reactions
- Rearrangement reactions
- Polymerisation reactions
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Last modified: December 14, 2025
