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Chemistry LibreTexts

Bromination of Methane

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A Free Radical Substitution Reaction

This page gives you the facts and a simple, uncluttered mechanism for the free radical substitution reaction between methane and bromine. This reaction between methane and bromine happens in the presence of ultraviolet light - typically sunlight. This is a good example of a photochemical reaction - a reaction brought about by light.

CH4+Br2CH3Br+HBr

The organic product is bromomethane. One of the hydrogen atoms in the methane has been replaced by a bromine atom, so this is a substitution reaction. However, the reaction doesn't stop there, and all the hydrogens in the methane can in turn be replaced by bromine atoms.

The mechanism

The mechanism involves a chain reaction. During a chain reaction, for every reactive species you start off with, a new one is generated at the end - and this keeps the process going.The over-all process is known as free radical substitution, or as a free radical chain reaction.

  • Chain initiation: The chain is initiated (started) by UV light breaking a bromine molecule into free radicals.

Br2arrow_y2zk.GIF2Brelectron.GIF

  • Chain propagation reactions: These are the reactions which keep the chain going.

CH4 + Brelectron_cjuk.GIFarrow.GIFCH3electron_jqqe.GIF + HBr

CH3electron_92lk.GIF + Br2arrow_x6hf.GIFCH3Br + Brelectron_2jkc.GIF

  • Chain termination reactions: These are reactions which remove free radicals from the system without replacing them by new ones.

2Brelectron_b9oy.GIFarrow_w2uy.GIFBr2

CH3electron_vftg.GIF + Brelectron_psm6.GIFarrow_dssl.GIFCH3Br

CH3electron_j214.GIF + CH3electron_7yrk.GIFarrow_tx6h.GIFCH3CH3

Contributors

Jim Clark (Chemguide.co.uk)


This page titled Bromination of Methane is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jim Clark.

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