Usually, the initial product is a hydroquinone. In the presence of excess quinone or air, this often oxidizes back into a new, substituted quinone. 2. Diels-Alder Cycloaddition Substituted quinones act as powerful dienophiles . Electronic Effects: Electron-withdrawing groups (like −CNnegative cap C cap N −CO2Rnegative cap C cap O sub 2 cap R
Electron-withdrawing groups make the quinone a stronger oxidant (easier to reduce). Electron-donating groups (like −OMenegative cap O cap M e −CH3negative cap C cap H sub 3 ) make the quinone more stable and harder to reduce. reactions of substituted quinones
Substituted quinones are some of the most versatile electrophiles in organic chemistry. Because the quinone core is electron-deficient, their reactivity is largely governed by the nature and position of the substituents ( -groups) attached to the ring. 1. Nucleophilic Conjugate Addition (Michael Addition) Usually, the initial product is a hydroquinone
If the quinone has a good leaving group (like a halogen in p-chloranil ), a nucleophile can displace it directly. This is a common route for synthesizing complex dyes and bioactive molecules. 5. Photochemical Reactions Substituted quinones are some of the most versatile
Under UV light, substituted quinones can undergo [2+2] cycloadditions or abstract hydrogen atoms from solvents. This is frequently used in polymer chemistry and the study of DNA damage.
This is the most common reaction for substituted quinones. A nucleophile (like an amine, thiol, or alcohol) attacks the double bond.