Mastering unimolecular β-elimination — from carbocation formation to Zaitsev product selection, rearrangements, and the SN1/E1 competition.
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The E1 (elimination unimolecular) reaction is characterized by two distinct steps:
Because the rate-determining step is dissociation of the leaving group, the rate depends solely on substrate concentration — first-order kinetics.
The leaving group (e.g., a halide) dissociates from the substrate. This is the slow, rate-limiting step — it requires breaking the C–LG bond and costs the most energy.
The resulting carbocation is sp²-hybridized and planar. This geometry is important: it is the same intermediate shared with SN1, which is why E1 and SN1 always compete.
A base (which can be weak in E1 — the carbocation is highly electrophilic and makes the β-H more acidic) removes a hydrogen from a neighboring carbon.
The double bond forms as deprotonation occurs. Because steric hindrance is not a geometric constraint in E1 (unlike E2, which requires anti-periplanar geometry), any available β-hydrogen can be removed. This means E1 selectively gives the Zaitsev alkene — the most substituted, most stable alkene — as the major product.
Rate = k[substrate]
The rate does not depend on the base/nucleophile concentration. Changes in base strength have minimal influence on the rate — what matters is the ease of carbocation formation (substrate structure, leaving group ability, solvent).
E1 and SN1 share the same first step (carbocation formation) and therefore the same rate-limiting barrier. After the intermediate, the two pathways diverge:
This explains why heat favors E1 over SN1: at higher temperatures, more molecules have enough energy to overcome the larger E1 barrier. At room temperature, SN1 is generally preferred.
The E1 product sits at higher potential energy than the SN1 product — the π bond in the alkene is reactive and susceptible to addition, oxidation, and reduction.
Tertiary substrates are ideal — they form the most stable carbocations. Secondary may work under some conditions. Primary substrates rarely undergo E1 — the carbocation is too unstable.
A good leaving group lowers the activation energy. I⁻ > Br⁻ > Cl⁻ >> F⁻.
Polar protic solvents (water, alcohols) stabilize the carbocation and leaving group through solvation, accelerating the reaction.
Increasing temperature gradually increases the E1/SN1 product ratio in favor of E1.
Mechanism: 2-step → LG departs → carbocation forms → base removes β-H → π bond forms
Rate: First-order (substrate only) | Product: Zaitsev alkene (most substituted) | Rearrangements: Common
Always remember: SN1 and E1 are always in competition. You will often get both products in appreciable amounts. The temperature of the reaction is your primary tool for shifting the ratio. Review the SN1 guide alongside this one for the full picture.
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