Any species that has an unshared pair of electrons (any Lewis base)
can act as a nucleophile whether it is neutral or has a negative charge.
A nucleophile (Nu:-) is a
species that attacks an electrophile (E+) (electron pair acceptor)
by making a pair of electrons available to it; it is an electron pair donor:
Nu:- + E+ →
Nu-E + by-products
SN2 reactions and nucleophiles
The rates of SN2 reactions are dependent of the identity
of the nucleophile since it does appear in the rate determining step:
R = [Nu:- ] *
[E+]
This may be illustrated by the effect
of changing the nucleophile from H2O to OH- for CH3Br
which reacts by an SN2 mechanism (Fig. 1).
The rate of reaction is multiplied by 5000:
Which nucleophiles are considered
“good nucleophiles”?
Good and poor nucleophiles or high
and low nucleophilicity are kinetically determined concepts. Answers to these
questions are obtained experimentally via pairs of SN reactions
which are carried out as competition experiments. In a competition experiment
two nucleophiles react simultaneously with one substrate and two reaction
products are produced. The main product is the compound that results from the
more reactive nucleophile.
For SN2 reactions in solution, there are
four main principles that govern the effect of the nucleophile on the rate
although the nucleophilicity order is not absolute but depends on other factors
such as on substrate, leaving group and solvent.
A nucleophile with a negative charge is always a more powerful nucleophile than its conjugate acid (i.e. OH- more powerful than H2O, NH2- more powerful than NH3).
A nucleophile with a negative charge is always a more powerful nucleophile than its conjugate acid (i.e. OH- more powerful than H2O, NH2- more powerful than NH3).
Nucleophilicity follows the order
of basicity when comparing nucleophiles whose attacking atom is in the same row
of the periodic table. An approximate order of nucleophilicity is as follows:
NH2- > RO-
> OH- > R2NH > ArO- > NH3 > pyridine
> F- > H2O > ClO4-
Nucleophilicity increases going
down the periodic table:
I-> Br- > Cl- > F-
(this order is
solvent dependent)
RS- > RO-
RSH > ROH
The main reason that smaller
halides (nucleophiles in general) are
less powerful nucleophiles than the larger ones is because they are solvated
more effectively by the usual protic solvents (Fig.2). That is, because the
negative charge in F- is more concentrated than the
charge of I-, the former is more tightly surrounded by a
shell of solvent molecules that become a barrier between it and the substrate
(electrophile).
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