Chlorination of (R)-2-Chlorobutane: Meso vs Racemic Isomers

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When (R)-2-chlorobutane undergoes chlorination, the resulting 2,3-dichlorobutane consists of 71% meso isomer and 29% racemic isomers. The disproportionate yield arises from steric hindrance, which influences the approach of chlorine to the alpha carbon, favoring the formation of the meso product over the racemic ones. The mechanism involves the potential for chlorine atom exchange under light conditions, leading to the generation of secondary radicals that can yield racemic products. The diastereoselectivity of the reaction is significant, as the addition of chlorine to the 3 carbon is influenced by the stereochemistry of the 2 carbon, resulting in different transition states for the meso and racemic products. This explains why the mixture does not result in a 50:50 distribution of meso and (2R,3R)-2,3-dichlorobutane.
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When (R)-2-chlorobutane is chlorinated, we obtain some 2,3-dichlorobutane. It consists of 71% meso isomer and 29% racemic isomers. Explain why the mixture need not be 50:50 meso and (2R,3R)-2,3-dichlorobutane
 
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Not an easy question

Hello,

I have been doing quite a lot of brainstorm after I saw your question. The mixture is supposed to be a 71% meso-product and RR and SS products, 14,5% each.

Please view the attachment for easy understanding.

We may explain it by relatively large volume of chlorine atom. Chlorine molecule tends to approach to the alfa carbon atom from the other side of methyl group because of the steric hindrance; this is the cause of formation of 2,3-disubstituted product. Two 14,5% mixtures of racemic products are formed also. The yield of meso product is quite higher than the racemic ones, and this is because symmetrical diastereomers are less likely to occur than the asymmetric ones; thus "symmetric" racemic mixture is expected to be formed less than the "asymmetric" meso-product.

My approach is not the only explanation; I will read other comments also.

Regards
chem_tr
 
thanks for your answer. but the question use (R) isomer not a racemic.
 
Hello,

You may be right, but it is not important in my opinion whether you take 2R- or 2S-chlorobutane as a start; the resultant compounds are always the same.

2R-chlorobutane or 2S-chlorobutane react similarly with chlorine to give the same products, regardless of stereochemistry of the starting material.

Let's speculate this in terms of stereochemistry and reaction mechanism.

Regards
chem_tr
 
If the conditions for the chlorination are Cl2 and light, then it's possible that the chlorine atom in the 2-chlorobutane is exchanging. The light can cleave the relatively weak Cl-C bond forming a secondary radical, which has no stereochemical information. That radical can then combine with a chlorine radical (or chlorine molecule) to for racemic 2-chlorobutane. Then the second reaction can take place at the 3 position of the butane to give the observed racemic product.

For reference, a C-Cl bond is worth about 330 kJ/mol and a C-H bond is worth about 413 kJ/mol. From those figures, the C-Cl bond should exchange much faster than the chlorination of the 3 position. (energies from this website: http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~cchieh/cact/c120/bondel.html )

It is possible, however, that this chlorine doesn't exchange. If I were really going to run this reaction, I would expect it to however.

The reason the meso is more prevalent than the racemic is because the addition of the chlorine radical to the 3 carbon is diastereoselective (it depends on the stereochemistry of the 2 carbon, to an extent). I think that's essentially what chem_tr is saying too.
 
That is remember that diastereomers have different properties, as with the meso and the racemic product of this reaction, unlike enantiomers. This will correspond to different transition states.


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GCT: precisely. Thanks for distilling that down.
 

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