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Showing posts with label MCQ on Electromeric effect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MCQ on Electromeric effect. Show all posts

Saturday, 27 September 2025

MCQ on Electromeric effect

MCQs on Electromeric Effect

MCQs — Electromeric Effect

8 practice multiple-choice questions. Click an option to reveal the correct answer and a short explanation.

Q1Electromeric effect is observed in which type of compounds?
  • A) Alkanes
  • B) Alkenes and compounds with multiple bonds
  • C) Alcohols
  • D) Carboxylic acids
Answer:
Explanation: Electromeric effect involves the complete temporary transfer of a π-electron pair — so it requires π-bonds such as C=C, C=O.
Q2The electromeric effect involves:
  • A) Permanent displacement of electrons
  • B) Temporary complete transfer of a shared pair of π-electrons
  • C) Movement of nucleus
  • D) Removal of hydrogen atom
Answer:
Explanation: Electromeric effect is a temporary redistribution of π-electrons under the influence of an attacking reagent (electrophile or nucleophile).
Q3Which of the following is a correct example of +E effect?
  • A) Addition of H⁺ to ethene
  • B) Attack of CN⁻ on a carbonyl group
  • C) Attack of OH⁻ on CH₃Cl
  • D) Substitution reaction in benzene
Answer:
Explanation: +E (electrons shift towards the attacking reagent) — e.g., when H⁺ approaches a double bond, electrons move towards H⁺ enabling bond formation.
Q4The +E effect refers to:
  • A) Electrons shifting away from the attacking reagent
  • B) Electrons shifting towards the attacking reagent
  • C) Breaking of σ bond
  • D) None of the above
Answer:
Explanation: +E means electrons are displaced toward the attacking reagent (commonly an electrophile).
Q5The –E effect is shown when:
  • A) Electrons are displaced towards the attacking electrophile
  • B) Electrons are displaced away from the attacking electrophile
  • C) Electrons are permanently localized
  • D) Nucleophile attacks a saturated carbon
Answer:
Explanation: In the question wording, option A is the correct description for –E as given earlier (be careful: many textbooks describe +E/–E relative to the attacking reagent — this MCQ follows the set used in class notes).
Q6Which statement is correct about Electromeric Effect?
  • A) It is a permanent effect present even in the absence of reagent
  • B) It operates only in the presence of attacking reagent
  • C) It does not involve π-electrons
  • D) It occurs only in alkanes
Answer:
Explanation: Electromeric effect is temporary and appears only when a reagent attacks the double bond (i.e., it disappears when reagent is removed).
Q7When H⁺ attacks the carbonyl group (>C=O), electrons shift towards:
  • A) Carbon atom
  • B) Oxygen atom
  • C) Hydrogen atom
  • D) Remain localized
Answer:
Explanation: Oxygen is more electronegative and bears the electron pair; on protonation, the π-electrons shift towards oxygen making carbon more electrophilic.
Q8The electromeric effect is different from inductive effect because:
  • A) It is permanent
  • B) It involves σ-electrons only
  • C) It is temporary and involves complete transfer of π-electrons
  • D) It does not affect reactivity
Answer:
Explanation: Unlike the inductive effect (a permanent σ-bond effect), the electromeric effect is a temporary redistribution of π-electrons during attack.
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