Chemical Properties of Alkyl Benzenes
Reactions of the Side Chain (Oxidation, Halogenation) and the Ring (Substitution).
Alkyl benzenes (like Toluene) exhibit two types of chemical reactions: those involving the alkyl side chain and those involving the benzene ring. The alkyl group acts as an activating, ortho-para directing group for ring substitutions.
1. Oxidation of Side Chain
Strong Oxidation to Benzoic Acid
Strong oxidizing agents like alkaline $KMnO_4$ or acidic $K_2Cr_2O_7$ oxidize the entire alkyl side chain directly to the carboxylic acid group ($-COOH$), regardless of the chain length.
Example: Tert-butyl benzene ($C_6H_5-C(CH_3)_3$) does not undergo oxidation because it lacks benzylic hydrogen.
2. Free Radical Halogenation
Side Chain Substitution
Reaction with chlorine or bromine in the presence of UV light ($h\nu$) or heat leads to substitution at the benzylic position via a free radical mechanism.
Note: In the absence of light and presence of a Lewis acid ($FeCl_3$), ring substitution occurs instead.
3. Electrophilic Substitution (Ring Reactions)
Ortho-Para Directing Nature
The alkyl group is electron-releasing (+I effect, Hyperconjugation). It activates the benzene ring and directs incoming electrophiles to the Ortho and Para positions.
A. Nitration
B. Halogenation
Knowledge Check
Test your understanding of Alkyl Benzene Reactions
Live classes starting on E Acad Sutra
ReplyDelete