A leaving group is an atom or molecule that detaches from an organic molecule, which, after detachment, is called the residual or main part. The ability for a leaving to leave is lability. Leaving groups affect the intrinsic reactivity , not the nucleophilic discrimination factors .
The lower the pKa of the conjugate acid, the better the leaving group, because then they can easily stabilize the developing negative charge. Conversely, a strong base is a poor leaving group. SN1 reactions prefer halide ions as leaving groups.
In room-temperate water, the sequence of lability is:
- Weak, unstable, great lability
- NH2-
- CH3O-
- HO-
- CH3COO-
- F
- water
- Cl
- Br
- I
- N3
- SCN
- NO2
- CN
- Strong, stable
- NO3 is also weaker than F.
During the SN2 nucleophilic attack , a partial negative charge forms on the leaving group. During SN1 reactions, the leaving group anionizes and leaves.
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In the non-mechanistic transformations, leaving group is the actual substituent group present in the substrate and product.