From bromine Alkenes reliably add bromine without catalysis to give the
vicinal dibromides: :RCH=CH2 + Br2 → RCHBrCH2Br Aromatic compounds undergo bromination simultaneously with evolution of
hydrogen bromide. Catalysts such as AlBr3 or FeBr3 are needed for the reaction to happen on aromatic rings. Chlorine-based catalysts (FeCl3, AlCl3) could be used, but yield would drop slightly as dihalogens(BrCl) could form. The reaction details following the usual patterns of
electrophilic aromatic substitution: :RC6H5 + Br2 → RC6H4Br + HBr A prominent application of this reaction is the production of
tetrabromobisphenol-A from
bisphenol-A. Free-radical substitution with bromine is commonly used to prepare organobromine compounds. Carbonyl-containing, benzylic, allylic substrates are especially prone to this reactions. For example, the commercially significant
bromoacetic acid is generated directly from acetic acid and bromine in the presence of
phosphorus tribromide catalyst: :CH3CO2H + Br2 → BrCH2CO2H + HBr Bromine also converts
fluoroform to
bromotrifluoromethane.
From hydrogen bromide Hydrogen bromide adds across double bonds to give alkyl bromides, following the
Markovnikov rule: :RCH=CH2 + HBr → RCHBrCH3 Under free radical conditions, the direction of the addition can be reversed. Free-radical addition is used commercially for the synthesis of 1-bromoalkanes, precursors to tertiary amines and quaternary ammonium salts.
2-Phenethyl bromide (C6H5CH2CH2Br) is produced via this route from
styrene. Hydrogen bromide can also be used to convert alcohols to alkyl bromides. This reaction, that must be done under low temperature conditions, is employed in the industrial synthesis of
allyl bromide: :HOCH2CH=CH2 + HBr → BrCH2CH=CH2 + H2O
Methyl bromide, another fumigant, is generated from methanol and hydrogen bromide.
From bromide salts Bromide ions, as provided by salts like
sodium bromide, function as a nucleophiles in the formation of organobromine compounds by displacement. An example of this salt mediated bromide displacement is the use of
Copper(II) bromide on
ketones: R-CO-CH2-R' + 2 CuBr2 → R-CO-CHBr-R' + 2 CuBr + HBr ==Applications==