The heating of phenylmethyl ether with HI produces:
A
Iodobenzene
B
Phenol
C
Benzene
D
Ethyl chloride
Step-by-Step Solution
The reaction of phenylmethyl ether (anisole) with hydrogen iodide (HI) involves the cleavage of the C-O bond.
Bond Strength: The oxygen atom is bonded to a methyl group (alkyl) and a phenyl group (aryl). The bond between the oxygen and the benzene ring (Csp2−O) has a partial double bond character due to resonance, making it much stronger and difficult to break compared to the bond between oxygen and the methyl group (Csp3−O) .
Mechanism: The reaction proceeds via the protonation of the ether oxygen. The iodide ion (I−), being a good nucleophile, attacks the less sterically hindered methyl carbon via an SN2 mechanism.
Products: This results in the cleavage of the O−CH3 bond, forming methyl iodide (CH3I) and phenol (C6H5OH). Iodobenzene is not formed because the strong aryl-oxygen bond remains intact.
Reaction: C6H5−O−CH3+HIΔC6H5OH+CH3I
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