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  2. Markovnikov's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markovnikov's_rule

    The anti-Markovnikov rule can be illustrated using the addition of hydrogen bromide to isobutylene in the presence of benzoyl peroxide or hydrogen peroxide. The reaction of HBr with substituted alkenes was prototypical in the study of free-radical additions. Early chemists discovered that the reason for the variability in the ratio of ...

  3. Morris S. Kharasch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_S._Kharasch

    In 1869, a Russian chemist named Vladimir Markovnikov demonstrated that the addition of HBr to alkenes usually but not always resulted in a specific orientation. Markovnikov's rule, which stems from these observations, states that in the addition of HBr or another hydrogen halide to an alkene, the acidic proton will add to the less substituted carbon of the double bond. [3]

  4. Hydrohalogenation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrohalogenation

    In the presence of peroxides, HBr adds to a given alkene in an anti-Markovnikov addition fashion. Regiochemistry follows from the reaction mechanism, which exhibits halogen attack on the least-hindered unsaturated carbon.

  5. Syn and anti addition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syn_and_anti_addition

    If an epoxide mechanism is followed, hydroxide groups are added in an anti fashion. Neither Markovnikov or anti-Markovnikov because the substituents are the same. Hydrobromination: Stereospecific: Can be syn or anti addition, depending on situation. When alkenes undergo hydrobromination, the alkyl bromides are formed Markovnikov.

  6. Free-radical addition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-radical_addition

    [3]: 188, 751 The result is typically anti-Markovnikov addition, a phenomenon Morris Kharasch called the "peroxide effect". [4] Reaction is slower with alkynes than alkenes. [3]: 750 In the paradigmatic example, hydrogen bromide radicalyzes to monatomic bromine. These bromine atoms add to an alkene at the most accessible site, to give a ...

  7. Hydroboration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroboration

    In terms of regiochemistry, hydroboration is typically anti-Markovnikov, i.e. the hydrogen adds to the most substituted carbon of the double bond. That the regiochemistry is reverse of a typical HX addition reflects the polarity of the B δ+-H δ− bonds. Hydroboration proceeds via a four-membered transition state: the hydrogen and the boron ...

  8. Hydroamination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroamination

    Regioselectivity issues also hamper the synthetic utility of the resulting products, with Markovnikov addition of the amine being the most common outcome over the less favoured anti-Markovnikov addition (see figure). As a result, there are now numerous catalysts that can be utilised in the hydroamination of alkene, allene and alkyne substrates ...

  9. Radical (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_(chemistry)

    In 1933 Morris S. Kharasch and Frank Mayo proposed that free radicals were responsible for anti-Markovnikov addition of hydrogen bromide to allyl bromide. [25] [26] In most fields of chemistry, the historical definition of radicals contends that the molecules have nonzero electron spin.