Part 6: MECHANISMS
Note that no other reagents are needed in order to complete any of these sequences, you should only be using what is there.

A.
This is an acid catalysed hydration of an alkene.  The first step is protonation of the alkene with the H+ to give the more stable carbocation, in this case a 2o carbocation. Then the lone pairs on the O act as the nucleophile attacking the carbocation. Loss of the proton gives the product.   It is important to remember that in an acidic solution (we have H+ defined) that the amount of hydroxide ion (i.e. HO-) is minimal.... think of the pKa which for this dissociation would be about 16. So the nucleophile will be the water itself.

alkene hydration

B.
This is a slight variation of the formation of a halohydrin, the difference here is that the nucleophile is an alcohol and the reaction is intramolecular. So the alkene reacts with the bromine to form the cyclic bromonium ion (n.b. alcohols don't react with bromine), this cationic intermdiate is attacked by the lone pairs on the O acting as the nucleophile in an SN1 like reaction as the nucleophile attacks the more substituted end of the bromonium ion due the greater +ve character. Loss of the proton gives the product.   The base could be the bromide ion is no other bases are added)



C.
This is the first part of the acid catalysed polymerisation of an alkene.  The first step is protonation of the alkene with the H+ to give the more stable carbocation, in this case a 3o carbocation. Then the pi electrons in the second molecule of the alkene act as the nucleophile attacking the carbocation. Loss of the proton gives the product.  The base could be another molecule of alkene of the conjugate base of the original acid.

acid polymerisation


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