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Question
What happens when chlorobenzene is heated with aqueous ammonia in the presence of cuprous oxide at 475 K and under high pressure?
Very Long Answer
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Solution
When chlorobenzene is heated with aqueous ammonia in the presence of cuprous oxide (Cu2O) at 475K and under high pressure, the following occurs:
- The reaction leads to the substitution of the chlorine atom by an amino group (-NH2).
- This process is an example of nucleophilic aromatic substitution catalyzed by cuprous oxide.
- The product formed is aniline (C6H5NH2).
- The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is:
\[\mathrm{C_6H_5Cl} + 2\mathrm{NH_3} \xrightarrow[\text{high pressure}]{\mathrm{Cu_2O}, 475K} \mathrm{C_6H_5NH_2} + \mathrm{NH_4Cl}\] - Here, the chlorine atom is replaced by the amino group from ammonia, and ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) is formed as a byproduct.
- This reaction is important for the industrial synthesis of aniline, which is a key intermediate in dyes and pharmaceuticals.
Thus, chlorobenzene reacts with aqueous ammonia under these conditions in the presence of cuprous oxide catalyst to yield aniline and ammonium chloride.
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Chapter 10: Haloalkanes and Haloarenes - REVIEW EXERCISES [Page 603]
