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What happens when carbon tetrachloride is heated with dry hydrogen fluoride in the presence of antimony pentachloride? - Chemistry (Theory)

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Question

What happens when carbon tetrachloride is heated with dry hydrogen fluoride in the presence of antimony pentachloride?

Long Answer
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Solution

When carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) is heated with dry hydrogen fluoride (HF) in the presence of antimony pentachloride (SbCl5), substitutive fluorination occurs.

\[\ce{\underset{tetrachloride}{CCl4} + \underset{hydrogen fluoride}{2HF} ->[SbCl5][]\underset{chlorofluorocarbon}{CCl2F2} + 2HCl}\]

This reaction takes place because antimony pentachloride acts as a Lewis acid catalyst, facilitating the substitution of chlorine atoms in CCl4 with fluorine from HF. The presence of SbCl5 helps to generate a more reactive electrophilic fluorinating species or activates the substrate for nucleophilic attack by fluoride.

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