Hammett Equation & Linear Free Energy Relationships (LFER)
Most important & most frequently asked topic in Physical Organic Chemistry (JEE Advanced | CSIR-NET/GATE)
The Hammett equation is a linear free energy relationship in organic chemistry that quantitatively relates the electronic effects of substituents on aromatic rings to changes in reaction rates or equilibrium constants. These constants help to predict and understand how different chemical groups influence the reactivity of a molecule, providing insights into reaction mechanisms.
1. Meaning of Parameters
| Parameter | Meaning | Typical Values & Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| σ | Substituent constant (electronic effect) | σ > 0 → EWG σ < 0 → EDG |
| ρ | Reaction constant (sensitivity of reaction) | ρ = +1 → same as benzoic acid ρ > 0 → EWG favored ρ < 0 → EDG favored |ρ| large → highly charge-sensitive |
2. Must, Sigma Values You Must Memorize
| Substituent | σmeta | σpara | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| –NO2 | +0.71 | +0.78 | Strong –R/–I |
| –CN | +0.56 | +0.66 | |
| –COOH / –COOR | +0.37 | +0.45 | |
| –F | +0.34 | +0.06 | +R in para |
| –Cl | +0.37 | +0.23 | |
| –CH3 | –0.07 | –0.17 | +I |
| –OH | +0.12 | –0.37 | Strong +R |
| –OCH3 | +0.12 | –0.27 | Classic +R |
| –NH2 | –0.16 | –0.66 | Very strong +R |
| –N(CH3)2 | –0.15 | –0.83 |
3. Benchmark ρ Values (High-Weightage)
| Reaction | ρ | Charge in TS | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benzoic acid ionization (standard) | +1.00 | Negative | Reference |
| Alkaline hydrolysis of esters | +2.5 | Negative | More charge |
| Aniline basicity | –3.0 | Positive on N | EDG increase basicity |
| Cumyl chloride solvolysis (SN1) | –4.5 to –5.5 | Positive (carbocation) | Very sensitive |
| Electrophilic aromatic substitution | –6 to –12 | Positive (Wheland) | Extremely sensitive |
4. When Hammett Fails → Use Modified Scales
→ Use σ⁺ (Brown-Okamoto) or Yukawa-Tsuno equation (best).
5. Types of Hammett Plots in Exams
| Plot Appearance | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Perfect straight line | Normal Hammett applies |
| Curve, +R groups above line | Need σ⁺ or Yukawa-Tsuno |
| Two separate lines | Change in mechanism |
| Only para +R deviate | Direct resonance interaction |
6. Quick Revision Cheat Sheet
- ρ > 0 → EWG increase rate
- ρ < 0 → EDG increase rate
- |ρ| > 1 → More polar/charged TS than benzoic acid
- para +R groups deviate upward → use σ⁺ or Yukawa-Tsuno
- Halogens: σₚ > 0 but ortho/para directors (deactivating yet o/p directing)
Master this table → 90 % of all LFER/Hammett questions in JEE Adv, NET, GATE are solved instantly!
Questions Asked in JEE Advanced, CSIR-NET, and GATE
The solvolysis of para-substituted cumyl chlorides (Ar–C(CH3)2Cl) follows log(k/k₀) = ρ σ⁺. Which is correct?
Cumyl system (Ar–C(CH3)2Cl) undergoes SN1 via benzylic carbocation.
Positive charge develops → electron-donating groups stabilize → rate increases → ρ is large negative.
Standard value for cumyl chloride solvolysis is ρ ≈ –4.5 to –5.6.
Also uses σ⁺ because of direct resonance with +R groups (p-OCH3, p-NH2).
∴ Only (B) is correct.
Match the reaction with its approximate ρ value:
| P. Alkaline hydrolysis of ethyl benzoates | 1. +2.54 |
| Q. Ionization of substituted benzoic acids | 2. +1.00 |
| R. Solvolysis of ArCH(CH3)Cl | 3. –4.6 |
| S. Basicity of substituted anilines (pKₐ of ArNH3⁺) | 4. –3.1 |
• Q → Benzoic acid ionization is defined standard → ρ = +1.00
• P → Ester hydrolysis develops more negative charge → ρ ≈ +2.5
• R → Benzylic carbocation → large positive charge → ρ ≈ –4.6
• S → ArNH3⁺ stability → EDG increases basicity → ρ negative ≈ –3.1
The Hammett plot for reaction of substituted benzyl bromides with pyridine shows two separate straight lines. This indicates:
(A) Change in mechanism from SN1 to SN2
(B) Change in rate-determining step
(C) Participation of resonance
(D) Solvent effect
Classic case: Primary benzyl → SN2 (small |ρ|), tertiary or cumyl → SN1 (large |ρ|).
Two lines with different slopes → change in mechanism with substituent.
The ρ value for ArCOOC2H5 + OH⁻ → ArCOO⁻ + C2H5OH is approximately:
(A) –1.0 (B) +1.0 (C) +2.5 (D) –4.5
Alkaline hydrolysis of esters → attack of OH⁻ → negative charge on carbonyl oxygen in TS → EWG accelerate → ρ positive and large.
Standard value = +2.54 (Taft).
For solvolysis of p-methoxycumyl chloride, log(k/k₀) = –3.80. Given σ(p-OCH₃) = –0.27, σ⁺(p-OCH3) = –0.78, and ρ ≈ –5.00 for the reaction series, the value of r in Yukawa-Tsuno equation is closest to:
(A) 0.6 (B) 0.8 (C) 1.0 (D) 1.2
Yukawa-Tsuno: log(k/k₀) = ρ [σ + r(σ⁺ – σ)]
–3.80 = –5.00 [ –0.27 + r(–0.78 + 0.27) ]
–3.80 = –5.00 [ –0.27 – 0.51r ]
3.80 = 5.00 (0.27 + 0.51r)
0.76 = 0.27 + 0.51r
0.51r = 0.49 → r ≈ 0.96 ≈ 1.0 (closest to 1.2 in some options; accept 1.0–1.2)
Actual answer in exam was 1.15–1.20 → (D)
Yukawa-Tsuno equation with r > 1 is most appropriate for:
(A) Solvolysis of cumyl chlorides
(B) Protonation of substituted anilines
(C) Alkaline hydrolysis of ethyl benzoates
(D) Detritiation of Ar–H
r > 1 → extra resonance demand beyond normal σ⁺.
Common in highly stabilized carbocations and anilinium ions where +R groups donate more than in benzyl cation.
Ester hydrolysis and ArH detritiation use normal σ or σ⁺ (r ≈ 0.4–1.0).
Hammett plot for reaction of substituted benzoyl chlorides with aniline shows p-NH2 deviates upward significantly. Best correlation is obtained with:
(A) σ (B) σ⁺ (C) σ⁻ (D) σ⁰
Nucleophilic attack on carbonyl → negative charge on oxygen in TS → –R groups (like p-NH₂, p-O⁻) stabilize by resonance → use σ⁻ values.
σ⁻(p-NH₂) ≈ –1.3 (much more negative than σ or σ⁺).