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  2. Walden inversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walden_inversion

    In the Walden inversion, the backside attack by the nucleophile in an S N 2 reaction gives rise to a product whose configuration is opposite to the reactant. Therefore, during S N 2 reaction, 100% inversion of product takes place. This is known as Walden inversion. It was first observed by chemist Paul Walden in 1896.

  3. SNi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SNi

    In the complete picture for this reaction the sulfite reacts with a chlorine ion in a standard S N 2 reaction with inversion of configuration. When the solvent is also a nucleophile such as dioxane two successive S N 2 reactions take place and the stereochemistry is again retention .

  4. Antarafacial and suprafacial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarafacial_and_suprafacial

    In particular, antarafacial topology corresponds to inversion of configuration for the carbon atom of a [1, n]-sigmatropic rearrangement, and conrotation for electrocyclic ring closure, while suprafacial corresponds to retention and disrotation.

  5. SN2 reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SN2_reaction

    If the substrate that is undergoing S N 2 reaction has a chiral centre, then inversion of configuration (stereochemistry and optical activity) may occur; this is called the Walden inversion. For example, 1-bromo-1-fluoroethane can undergo nucleophilic attack to form 1-fluoroethan-1-ol, with the nucleophile being an HO − group. In this case ...

  6. Brook rearrangement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brook_rearrangement

    The Brook rearrangement has been shown to occur with retention of configuration at the silicon center as demonstrated in the following Walden cycle: The Brook rearrangement Walden cycle All steps in this cycle were known to proceed with retention of configuration except for attack of the lithium reagent (which proceeded by inversion) and the ...

  7. Substitution reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_reaction

    In the second step, the nucleophilic reagent (Nuc:) attaches to the carbocation and forms a covalent sigma bond. If the substrate has a chiral carbon, this mechanism can result in either inversion of the stereochemistry or retention of configuration. Usually, both occur without preference. The result is racemization.

  8. SN1 reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SN1_reaction

    The negatively charged halide ion shields the carbocation from being attacked on the front side, and backside attack, which leads to inversion of configuration, is preferred. Thus the actual product no doubt consists of a mixture of enantiomers but the enantiomers with inverted configuration would predominate and complete racemization does not ...

  9. Retention of configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Retention_of...

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