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Solutions for Carboxylic Acids 46 (A more complete discussion of acidity and electronic effects can be found in Appendix 2 in this manual.) A few words about the two types of electronic effects: induction and resonance. Inductive effects are a result of polarized σ bonds, usually because of electronegative atom substituents. Resonance effects work through π systems, requiring overlap of p orbitals to delocalize electrons. All substituents have an inductive effect compared to hydrogen (the reference). Many groups also have a resonance effect; all that is required to have a resonance effect is that the atom or group have at least one p orbital for overlap. The most interesting groups have both inductive and resonance effects. In such groups, how can we tell the direction of electron movement, that is, whether a group is electron-donating or electron-withdrawing? And do the resonance and inductive effects reinforce or conflict with each other? We can never "turn off" an inductive effect from a resonance effect; that is, any time a substituent is expressing its resonance effect, it is also expressing its inductive effect. We can minimize a group's inductive effect by moving it farther away; inductive effects decrease with distance. The other side of the coin is more accessible to the experimenter: we can "turn off" a resonance effect in order to isolate an inductive effect. We can do this by interrupting a conjugated π system by inserting an sp3-hybridized atom, or by making resonance overlap impossible for steric reasons (steric inhibition of resonance). These three problems are examples of separating inductive effects from resonance effects. HC H E EH C HC H E CH2 C O O H O HC O CH2H The greater acidity of phenylacetic acid shows that the phenyl substituent is electron-withdrawing, thereby stabilizing the product carboxylate's negative charge. Does this contradict what was said above? Yes and no. What is different is that, since there is no p-orbital overlap between the phenyl group and the carboxyl group because of the CH2 group in between, the increased acidity must be from a pure inductive effect. This structure isolates the inductive effect (which can't be "turned off") from the resonance effect of the phenyl group. We can conclude three things: (1) phenyl is electron-withdrawing by induction; (2) phenyl is (in this case) electron-donating by resonance; (3) for phenyl, the resonance effect is stronger than the inductive effect (since it is an ortho,para-director). is a stronger acid than plus other resonance forms (a) and (b) In electrophilic aromatic substitution (EAS), the phenyl substituent is an ortho,para-director because it can stabilize the intermediate from electrophilic attack at the ortho and para positions. The phenyl substituent is electron-donating by resonance. BUT: 506