E
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?
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:
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?
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:
Explanation: +E means electrons are displaced toward the attacking reagent (commonly an electrophile).
Q5The –E effect is shown when:
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?
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:
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:
Explanation: Unlike the inductive effect (a permanent σ-bond effect), the electromeric effect is a temporary redistribution of π-electrons during attack.