IB Chemistry R3.4 R3.4.4
R3.4.4 SL

Electrophiles

Key Definition

An electrophile is a reactant that forms a bond to its reaction partner (the nucleophile) by accepting both bonding electrons from that partner. Electrophiles are electron-deficient species: they have a positive charge, a partial positive charge, or an empty orbital.

Nucleophiles vs Electrophiles

These are complementary partners. A reaction requires both.

Nucleophile (R3.4.1)

Donates an electron pair. Electron-rich. Has a lone pair or negative charge.

Electrophile (this lesson)

Accepts an electron pair. Electron-deficient. Has a positive or δ+ charge, or an empty orbital.

Recognising Electrophiles

You need to be able to identify electrophiles in chemical reactions. There are two main categories.

Positively charged electrophiles

Electrophile Formula Why it is electron-deficient
Hydrogen ionH⁺No electrons at all, empty 1s orbital
Nitronium ionNO₂⁺Positive charge on nitrogen
CarbocationR₃C⁺Carbon has only 6 electrons (incomplete octet)

Neutral electrophiles

Neutral molecules can act as electrophiles if they have a partial positive charge (δ+) on one atom due to bond polarity.

Electrophile Formula Which atom is δ+?
Hydrogen halidesHBr, HClH is δ+ (halogen pulls electron density)
Bromine (polarised)Br₂Becomes polarised near an electron-rich centre
HalogenoalkanesR-XCarbon bonded to halogen is δ+

How to Spot an Electrophile

Look for species that are electron-deficient. Ask yourself: does this species have a positive charge, a partial positive charge (δ+), or an incomplete octet? If yes, it is likely an electrophile. The curly arrow will always point towards the electrophile from the nucleophile.

Think About It

Why can Br₂ act as an electrophile even though it has no overall charge and no permanent dipole?

When Br₂ approaches an electron-rich region (e.g. the C=C double bond of an alkene), the electrons in the pi bond repel the electrons in the Br-Br bond. This creates a temporary (induced) dipole, making the nearest Br atom δ+ and the other δ-. The δ+ end can then accept an electron pair from the alkene.

Common Exam Mistakes

  • Saying an electrophile "donates" electrons. Electrophiles accept electron pairs.
  • Forgetting that neutral molecules can be electrophiles if they have a δ+ region.
  • Confusing nucleophile and electrophile. Think: nucleophile = nucleus-loving = attracted to positive, electrophile = electron-loving = attracted to negative/electron-rich.
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← R3.4.3 Heterolytic FissionR3.4.5 Electrophilic Add. →