Consider the reaction:
\[
\text{Ph–CH=CH}_2 \xrightarrow[\text{peroxide}]{\text{HBr}} \text{Product}
\]
Which of the following statements are correct?
[A.] The reaction proceeds through a more stable radical intermediate.
[B.] The role of peroxide is to generate \(\mathrm{H^\bullet}\) radical.
[C.] During this reaction, benzene is formed as a byproduct.
[D.] \(1\)-Bromo-\(2\)-phenylethane is formed as a minor product.
[E.] The same reaction in absence of peroxide proceeds via a carbocation intermediate.
Choose the correct answer.
Show Hint
The peroxide effect operates only with HBr and switches the mechanism from ionic to radical.
Concept:
Addition of HBr to alkenes in presence of peroxides follows the {free radical (anti-Markovnikov) mechanism},
known as the peroxide effect or Kharasch effect.
Step 1: Nature of the intermediate (Statement A)
In styrene (\(\text{Ph–CH=CH}_2\)), radical addition leads to a {benzylic radical},
which is highly stabilised due to resonance.
\[
\Rightarrow \text{Statement A is true.}
\]
Step 2: Role of peroxide (Statement B)
Peroxides decompose to form \(\mathrm{RO^\bullet}\) radicals, which abstract hydrogen from HBr
to generate \(\mathrm{Br^\bullet}\), not \(\mathrm{H^\bullet}\).
\[
\Rightarrow \text{Statement B is false.}
\]
Step 3: Formation of benzene (Statement C)
No rearrangement or elimination produces benzene in this mechanism.
\[
\Rightarrow \text{Statement C is false.}
\]
Step 4: Product distribution (Statement D)
Anti-Markovnikov addition gives \(1\)-bromo-\(2\)-phenylethane as the {major} product,
not a minor one.
\[
\Rightarrow \text{Statement D is false.}
\]
Step 5: Absence of peroxide (Statement E)
Without peroxide, HBr adds via the ionic (Markovnikov) pathway involving a carbocation intermediate.
\[
\Rightarrow \text{Statement E is true.}
\]
Final Conclusion:
\[
\boxed{\text{Statements A and E are correct}}
\]
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