SN1 vs SN2 Reactions – Mechanism, Differences & Applications
In nucleophilic substitution reactions, a nucleophile replaces a leaving group. This happens mainly through two mechanisms: SN1 (unimolecular) and SN2 (bimolecular). The choice of mechanism depends on the substrate, nucleophile, solvent, and leaving group.
🔹 SN1 Mechanism (Unimolecular Nucleophilic Substitution)
- Two-step process: Leaving group departs → carbocation forms → nucleophile attacks.
- Rate = k [substrate] (depends only on substrate).
- Favours tertiary substrates (stable carbocations).
- Occurs in polar protic solvents (water, alcohol).
- Can lead to racemization at chiral centers.
Example:
(CH3)3C–Br + H2O → (CH3)3C–OH + HBr
(CH3)3C–Br + H2O → (CH3)3C–OH + HBr
🔹 SN2 Mechanism (Bimolecular Nucleophilic Substitution)
- One-step process: Nucleophile attacks as leaving group leaves (concerted).
- Rate = k [substrate][nucleophile].
- Favours primary substrates (low steric hindrance).
- Occurs in polar aprotic solvents (DMSO, acetone, DMF).
- Causes inversion of configuration (Walden inversion).
Example:
CH3CH2Br + OH- → CH3CH2OH + Br-
CH3CH2Br + OH- → CH3CH2OH + Br-
📊 SN1 vs SN2 – Quick Comparison
| Feature | SN1 | SN2 |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Two-step (via carbocation) | One-step (concerted) |
| Rate Law | k [substrate] | k [substrate][nucleophile] |
| Preferred Substrate | 3° > 2° >> 1° | 1° > 2° >> 3° |
| Nucleophile | Weak sufficient | Strong required |
| Solvent | Polar protic (H2O, ROH) | Polar aprotic (DMSO, acetone) |
| Stereochemistry | Racemization | Inversion (Walden inversion) |
🧭 Decision Guide: When to Use SN1 vs SN2
✅ If substrate is tertiary + solvent is polar protic + nucleophile is weak → SN1
✅ If substrate is primary + solvent is polar aprotic + nucleophile is strong → SN2
✅ Secondary substrates can undergo either depending on base strength & solvent.
✅ If substrate is primary + solvent is polar aprotic + nucleophile is strong → SN2
✅ Secondary substrates can undergo either depending on base strength & solvent.
📌 Summary:
SN1 – Favoured by tertiary carbons, weak nucleophiles, polar protic solvents.
SN2 – Favoured by primary carbons, strong nucleophiles, polar aprotic solvents.
SN1 – Favoured by tertiary carbons, weak nucleophiles, polar protic solvents.
SN2 – Favoured by primary carbons, strong nucleophiles, polar aprotic solvents.
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