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What happens when chloroform is subjected to hydrolysis? - Chemistry (Theory)

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Question

What happens when chloroform is subjected to hydrolysis?

Long Answer
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Solution

When chloroform (CHCl3) is subjected to hydrolysis, particularly under alkaline conditions (presence of NaOH), it reacts stepwise to form formate ion and chloride ions via a key intermediate called dichlorocarbene (:CCl2).

  1. Hydroxide ion attacks chloroform, abstracting one hydrogen and causing the release of a chloride ion, forming dichlorocarbene:
    \[\mathrm{CHCl}_3 + \mathrm{OH}^- \rightarrow :\mathrm{CCl}_2 + \mathrm{Cl}^- + \mathrm{H}_2\mathrm{O}\]
  2. The dichlorocarbene intermediate reacts with hydroxide ions and water to yield formate ion and chloride ions:
    \[:\mathrm{CCl}_2 + 3\mathrm{OH}^- \rightarrow \mathrm{HCOO}^- + 2\mathrm{Cl}^- + \mathrm{H}_2\mathrm{O}\]
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