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Bredt's Rule | General Organic Chemistry Class 11/12

Bredt's Rule | General Organic Chemistry Class 11/12

Bredt's Rule

Stability of Bridgehead Carbons | General Organic Chemistry

1. What is Bredt's Rule?

Proposed by Julius Bredt in 1924, this rule defines the stability of double bonds in bridged bicyclic compounds.

Statement: A double bond cannot be placed at the bridgehead carbon of a bridged bicyclic system unless the rings are large enough.

This implies that bridgehead carbons cannot assume a planar geometry (required for $sp^2$ hybridization) in small ring systems.

2. Understanding Bicyclic Systems

Bridged Bicyclic Compound: Two rings share two or more atoms. The shared atoms are called Bridgehead Carbons.

Example: Bicyclo[2.2.1]heptane (Norbornane).

  • The structure forms a rigid "cage".
  • The bridgehead carbons are the junction points.

3. The Reason: Geometry & Strain

Why is a double bond forbidden at the bridgehead?

  1. Planarity Requirement: A carbon atom involved in a double bond ($C=C$) or a carbocation ($C^+$) is $sp^2$ hybridized.
  2. Geometry: $sp^2$ hybridization requires a Trigonal Planar geometry (bond angles of $120^\circ$).
  3. Constraint: In small bridged systems, the rigid cage structure forces the bridgehead bonds to be pyramidal (non-planar). Forcing them into a plane introduces immense Angle Strain and Torsional Strain.
High Strain $\rightarrow$ Extremely Unstable $\rightarrow$ Does Not Exist

4. Applications & Consequences

A. Stability of Carbocations

A carbocation ($C^+$) at a bridgehead position is extremely unstable because it cannot achieve the required planar geometry. It resists formation ($S_N1$ reactions fail).

B. Elimination Reactions

During dehydrohalogenation (removal of HX) or dehydration, a double bond will never form towards the bridgehead carbon, even if it is the more substituted position (Violation of Zaitsev's rule due to structural constraint).

C. Free Radicals

Bridgehead free radicals are also unstable but slightly more stable than carbocations because radicals can tolerate a pyramidal geometry better than cations.

5. Exceptions (Large Rings)

Bredt's rule is not absolute. If the rings are large enough, the strain is relieved, and a double bond can exist.

Prelog's Limit: A bridgehead double bond is stable if the sum of atoms in the rings ($S$) is $\ge$ 8. (e.g., Bicyclo[3.3.1]non-1-ene exists). However, for standard exam purposes, usually assume small rings ($S \le 7$) follow Bredt's rule rigidly.

Practice Quiz

Test your knowledge on Stability of Bicyclic Compounds.

Your Score: 0 / 10

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