O-Chem

Nucleophilic Substitution & Elimination: SN1, SN2, E1 & E2 Explained

The four most important reactions in O-Chem 1 — understand how to choose between them and you've cracked the hardest chapter.

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Organic chemistry is replete with reactions that determine the fate of a synthetic pathway. Among the most intellectually engaging and fundamentally important are nucleophilic substitution and elimination reactions. Both involve the breaking and forming of chemical bonds, yet they lead to very different products and follow distinct mechanistic pathways. Understanding these mechanisms is key to scoring well on exams — and to understanding the reactions you'll encounter throughout your course.

Overview

Nucleophilic Substitution: SN1 vs SN2

Substitution occurs when a nucleophile replaces a leaving group on the substrate.

SN1 — Unimolecular Substitution

SN1 is a unimolecular mechanism in which the rate of reaction is determined solely by the electrophilic substrate (i.e., the carbon bearing the leaving group). SN1 reactions occur in two steps and compete with E1 reactions.

  1. The leaving group departs, forming a planar carbocation intermediate — this is the rate-limiting step, and this intermediate is vulnerable to rearrangements.
  2. The nucleophile bonds to the carbocation site from either side of the molecule, resulting in complete racemization of the product (when the reacting center is chiral).

SN2 — Bimolecular Substitution

SN2 is a bimolecular reaction where the rate depends on both electrophile and nucleophile concentrations. It occurs in one concerted step.

  1. The nucleophile performs a backside attack — opposite to the leaving group — while the leaving group is simultaneously removed. This results in inversion of stereochemistry at the site of substitution.
Think about it: How does steric hindrance affect the backside attack in SN2? How might carbocations formed in SN1 rearrange before the nucleophile attacks?

Nucleophilic Elimination: E1 vs E2

Elimination occurs when the leaving group and a neighboring β-hydrogen are both removed, producing an alkene (a carbon–carbon double bond).

E1 — Unimolecular Elimination

E1 is a unimolecular, two-step mechanism that competes directly with SN1.

  1. The leaving group departs, forming a planar carbocation intermediate (rate-limiting step — same as SN1).
  2. The nucleophile acts as a base and removes a β-hydrogen. The lone pair on the neighboring carbon forms a new π bond with the carbocation, giving the Zaitsev alkene (most substituted, most stable).

E2 — Bimolecular Elimination

E2 is a bimolecular, one concerted step reaction.

  1. The base removes a β-hydrogen that is anti-periplanar to the leaving group, while the leaving group departs and the π bond forms — all simultaneously. This geometric requirement is critical and commonly tested.

A bulky base (like t-BuO⁻) can force the Hofmann product (less substituted, less stable alkene) by being unable to access the more hindered β-hydrogen.

How to Choose Between Substitution and Elimination

This is the most important skill in this chapter. The pathway depends on several interrelated factors:

1. Substrate Structure

Primary substrates favor SN2 unless the nucleophile/base is bulky (→ E2) or there is high β-branching. Tertiary substrates favor SN1/E1 because they can stabilize the carbocation, but SN2 is impossible due to steric hindrance.

2. Nucleophile/Base Strength

A strong, bulky base favors E2 over substitution — steric bulk prevents backside attack. Strong, charged, non-bulky nucleophiles favor SN2. Weak nucleophiles in polar protic solvents favor SN1/E1.

3. Solvent Effects

Polar protic solvents (water, alcohols) stabilize carbocations and favor SN1/E1. Polar aprotic solvents (DMSO, DMF, acetone) enhance nucleophilicity and favor SN2.

4. Temperature

Higher temperatures increase the proportion of elimination relative to substitution. Heat drives E1 over SN1 by providing the extra activation energy needed for β-hydrogen removal.

5. Leaving Group Ability

A good leaving group is essential for all four mechanisms. I⁻ > Br⁻ > Cl⁻ >> F⁻. Poor leaving groups (like OH⁻) must be protonated first to leave as water.

Quick Decision Guide

  • Methyl/Primary + strong nucleophile + polar aprotic → SN2
  • Primary + strong bulky base → E2
  • Secondary + strong nucleophile → SN2 (or mix)
  • Secondary + strong base → E2 (or mix)
  • Secondary + weak nucleophile + polar protic → SN1/E1
  • Tertiary + strong base → E2
  • Tertiary + weak nucleophile + polar protic → SN1/E1

For a full decision-tree roadmap covering every scenario with bulky bases and solvent effects, download the PDF below or check out the individual reaction guides.

SN1/SN2/E1/E2 Overview — Complete Guide Full study guide with diagrams — free to download and print
Download PDF

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