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Account for the fact that halogen in chlorobenzene is less reactive than in methyl chloride. - Chemistry (Theory)

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Question

Account for the fact that halogen in chlorobenzene is less reactive than in methyl chloride.

Very Long Answer
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Solution

  1. Reason for lower reactivity of halogen in chlorobenzene (aryl halide) than in methyl chloride (alkyl halide):
    • In chlorobenzene (C6H5Cl), the chlorine atom is bonded to an sp2 hybridized carbon of the benzene ring. 
    • The lone pair on chlorine participates in resonance with the aromatic ring, delocalizing electron density and increasing the C–Cl bond strength.
    • This resonance effect creates partial double bond character to the C–Cl bond, making it stronger and less reactive towards nucleophilic substitution or hydrolysis.
    • In methyl chloride (CH3Cl), chlorine is bonded to an sp3 hybridized carbon without resonance stabilization, so the C–Cl bond remains a typical single bond, more easily broken.
      Therefore, chlorine in chlorobenzene is less reactive than in methyl chloride.
  2. Structures and IUPAC Names:
    • Methyl chloride (IUPAC: chloromethane)
      Structure: CH3–Cl
    • Chlorobenzene (IUPAC: chlorobenzene)
      Structure: C6H5–Cl (aromatic ring with Cl substituent)
  3. Equations showing reactions:
    • Hydrolysis of methyl chloride:
      \[\ce{CH3Cl + H2O → CH3OH + HCl}\]
    • Hydrolysis of chlorobenzene is very slow due to resonance stabilization, typically negligible under normal conditions:
      \[\ce{C6H5Cl + H2O → (no significant reaction)}\]
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Chapter 10: Haloalkanes and Haloarenes - REVIEW EXERCISES [Page 603]

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Nootan Chemistry Part 1 and 2 [English] Class 12 ISC
Chapter 10 Haloalkanes and Haloarenes
REVIEW EXERCISES | Q 10.57 | Page 603
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