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Draw the radical bromination mechanism of isopropyl benzene. Show all electron flow with arrows and all intermediate structures.

a) Initiation step
b) Propagation step
c) Termination step
d) Substitution step

1 Answer

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Final answer:

a) Initiation: Light breaks into bromine radicals.

b) Propagation: Cumyl radical forms from isopropyl benzene, reacts with

Br₂, forming cumyl bromide.

c) Termination: Bromine radicals combine to form Br₂.

d) Substitution: Cumyl bromide may further react in varied ways depending on conditions.

Step-by-step explanation:

Initiation step:

In the presence of light or heat, the bromine molecule (Br) is homolytically cleaved to form two bromine radicals (2Br•).

Propagation step:

The bromine radical reacts with isopropylbenzene (C₆H₅CH(CH₃)₂) to form a benzylic radical, which then reacts with Br₂ to form a brominated product and a bromine radical.

This process can repeat multiple times, resulting in the substitution of several bromine atoms.

Termination step:

Two bromine radicals combine to form a non-reactive species, effectively terminating the chain reaction.

Substitution step:

The bromine radicals react with the aromatic ring of isopropylbenzene, resulting in the substitution of a hydrogen atom with a bromine atom.

Draw the radical bromination mechanism of isopropyl benzene. Show all electron flow-example-1
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