Question:

The major product formed in the following reaction is 

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In nucleophilic substitution reactions, especially with sodium amide (\( \text{NaNH}_2 \)) in liquid ammonia, halogens are replaced by nucleophilic groups like amines.
Updated On: Dec 14, 2025
  • (A)
  • (B)
  • (C)
  • (D)
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The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Reaction conditions: NaNH₂ in liquid NH₃

NaNH₂ is a strong base that can:

  1. Deprotonate acidic hydrogens
  2. Facilitate nucleophilic aromatic substitution
  3. Promote intramolecular cyclization

Analyzing the substrate:

  • Ortho-chlorobenzene with a -(CH₂)₃CN side chain
  • The CN group at the end of the chain
  • Chlorine is ortho to the side chain

Mechanism possibilities:

Option 1: Nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr)

  • NaNH₂ can replace Cl with NH₂
  • Would give option (A) or (B)
  • However, simple SNAr would give (A)

Option 2: Intramolecular cyclization

  • The CN group can be deprotonated (α to CN is acidic)
  • NaNH₂ deprotonates the CH₂ α to CN
  • The resulting carbanion can attack the aromatic ring ortho to Cl
  • This leads to nucleophilic aromatic substitution with ring closure
  • Forms an indane (5-membered ring fused to benzene)

Mechanism for cyclization:

  1. NaNH₂ deprotonates CH₂ adjacent to CN (most acidic position)
  2. Carbanion attacks ipso carbon (where Cl is attached)
  3. Cl leaves as the ring closes
  4. Forms 1-cyanoindane structure

Product analysis:

(A): Simple SNAr replacing Cl with NH₂ - less favorable than cyclization

(B): Para-substituted product - wrong regiochemistry

(C): 1-Cyanoindane - indane ring with CN at position 1

  • Formed by intramolecular cyclization
  • Most favored product 

(D): Tetralone - would require CN hydrolysis and different reaction path

Answer: (C) 

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