Leaving group
In
A species' ability to serve as a leaving group depends on its ability to stabilize the additional
In the broader IUPAC definition, the term also includes groups that depart without an electron pair in a heterolytic cleavage (groups specifically known as an
In this article, the discussions below mainly pertain to leaving groups that act as nucleofuges.

Leaving group ability
The physical manifestation of leaving group ability is the rate at which a reaction takes place. Good leaving groups give fast reactions. By transition state theory, this implies that reactions involving good leaving groups have low activation barriers leading to relatively stable transition states.
It is helpful to consider the concept of leaving group ability in the case of the first step of an SN1/E1 reaction with an anionic leaving group (ionization), while keeping in mind that this concept can be generalized to all reactions that involve leaving groups. Because the leaving group bears a larger negative charge in the transition state (and products) than in the starting material, a good leaving group must be able to stabilize this negative charge, i.e. form stable

The correlation between pKaH and leaving group ability, however, is not perfect. Leaving group ability represents the difference in energy between starting materials and a transition state (ΔG‡) and differences in leaving group ability are reflected in changes in this quantity (ΔΔG‡). The pKaH, however, represents the difference in energy between starting materials and products (ΔG°) with differences in acidity reflected in changes in this quantity (ΔΔG°). The ability to correlate these energy differences is justified by the Hammond postulate and the Bell–Evans–Polanyi principle. Also, the starting materials in these cases are different. In the case of the acid dissociation constant, the "leaving group" is bound to a proton in the starting material, while in the case of leaving group ability, the leaving group is bound to (usually) carbon. It is with these important caveats in mind that one must consider pKaH to be reflective of leaving group ability. Nevertheless, one can generally examine acid dissociation constants to qualitatively predict or rationalize rate or reactivity trends relating to variation of the leaving group. Consistent with this picture, strong bases such as OH−, OR2 and NR−2 tend to make poor leaving groups, due their inability to stabilize a negative charge.
Leaving groups ordered approximately in decreasing ability to leave[5] | |
---|---|
R−N+2 | dinitrogen |
R−OR'+2 | dialkyl ether |
R−OSO2RF | perfluoroalkylsulfonates (e.g. triflate) |
R–I | iodide |
R–OTs, R–OMs, etc. | tosylates, mesylates and similar sulfonates
|
R–Br | bromide |
R−OH+2, R'−OHR+ | water, alcohols |
R–Cl | chloride |
R−ONO2, R−OPO(OR')2 | nitrate, phosphate, and other inorganic esters |
R−SR'+2 | thioether
|
R−NR'+3, R−NH+3 | amines, ammonia |
R–F | fluoride |
R–OCOR | carboxylate |
R–OAr | phenoxides
|
R–OH, R–OR | hydroxide, alkoxides |
R–NR2 | amides |
R–H | hydride |
R–R' | arenide, alkanide |
What constitutes a reasonable leaving group is dependent on context. For SN2 reactions, typical synthetically useful leaving groups include Cl−, Br−, I−, −OTs, −OMs, −OTf, and H2O. Substrates containing phosphate and carboxylate leaving groups are more likely to react by competitive addition-elimination, while sulfonium and ammonium salts generally form ylides or undergo E2 elimination when possible. With reference to the table above, phenoxides (−OAr) constitute the lower limit for what is feasible as SN2 leaving groups: very strong nucleophiles like Ph2P− or EtS− have been used to demethylate anisole derivatives through SN2 displacement at the methyl group. Hydroxide, alkoxides, amides, hydride, and alkyl anions do not serve as leaving groups in SN2 reactions.
On the other hand, when anionic or dianionic tetrahedral intermediates collapse, the high electron density of the neighboring heteroatom facilitates the expulsion of a leaving group. Thus, in the case of ester and amide hydrolysis under basic conditions, alkoxides and amides are commonly proposed as leaving groups. For the same reason, E1cb reactions involving hydroxide as a leaving group are not uncommon (e.g., in the aldol condensation). It is exceedingly rare for groups such as H− (hydrides), R3C− (alkyl anions, R = alkyl or H), or Ar− (aryl anions, Ar = aryl) to depart with a pair of electrons because of the high energy of these species. The Chichibabin reaction provides an example of hydride as a leaving group, while the Wolff-Kishner reaction and Haller-Bauer reaction feature unstabilized carbanion leaving groups.
Contextual differences in leaving group ability
It is important to note that the list given above is qualitative and describes trends. The ability of a group to leave is contextual. For example, in SNAr reactions, the rate is generally increased when the leaving group is fluoride relative to the other halogens. This effect is due to the fact that the highest energy transition state for this two step addition-elimination process occurs in the first step, where fluoride's greater electron withdrawing capability relative to the other halides stabilizes the developing negative charge on the aromatic ring. The departure of the leaving group takes place quickly from this high energy Meisenheimer complex, and since the departure is not involved in the rate limiting step, it does not affect the overall rate of the reaction. This effect is general to conjugate base eliminations.
Even when the departure of the leaving group is involved in the rate limiting step of a reaction there can still exist contextual differences that can change the order of leaving group ability. In
There can still exist contextual differences in leaving group ability in the purest form, that is when the actual group that leaves is not affected by the reaction conditions (by protonation or Lewis acid complexation) and the departure of the leaving group occurs in the rate determining step. In the situation where other variables are held constant (nature of the alkyl electrophile, solvent, etc.), a change in nucleophile can lead to a change in the order of reactivity for leaving groups. In the case below, tosylate is the best leaving group when ethoxide is the nucleophile, but iodide and even bromide become better leaving groups in the case of the thiolate nucleophile.[7]
Leaving group (X) | ![]() |
![]() |
---|---|---|
Cl | 0.0074 | 0.0024 (at 40 °C) |
Br | 1 | 1 |
I | 3.5 | 1.9 |
OTs | 0.44 | 3.6 |
Activation
It is common in
The same principle is at work in the

In the vast majority of cases, reactions that involve leaving group activation generate a cation in a separate step, before either nucleophilic attack or elimination. For example, SN1 and E1 reactions may involve an activation step, whereas SN2 and E2 reactions generally do not.
In conjugate base eliminations
The requirement for a good leaving group is relaxed in conjugate base elimination reactions. These reactions include loss of a leaving group in the β position of an enolate as well as the regeneration of a carbonyl group from the tetrahedral intermediate in nucleophilic acyl substitution. Under forcing conditions, even amides can be made to undergo basic hydrolysis, a process that involves the expulsion of an extremely poor leaving group, R2N−. Even more dramatic, decarboxylation of benzoate anions can occur by heating with copper or Cu2O, involving the loss of an aryl anion. This reaction is facilitated by the fact that the leaving group is most likely an arylcopper compound rather than the much more basic alkali metal salt.
This dramatic departure from normal leaving group requirements occurs mostly in the realm of C=O double bond formation where formation of the very strong C=O double bond can drive otherwise unfavorable reactions forward. The requirement for a good leaving group is still relaxed in the case of C=C bond formation via E1cB mechanisms, but because of the relative weakness of the C=C double bond, the reaction still exhibits some leaving group sensitivity. Notably, changing the leaving group's identity (and willingness to leave) can change the nature of the mechanism in elimination reactions. With poor leaving groups, the E1cB mechanism is favored, but as the leaving group's ability changes, the reaction shifts from having a rate determining loss of leaving group from carbanionic intermediate B via TS BC‡ through having a rate determining deprotonation step via TS AB‡ (not pictured) to a concerted E2 elimination. In the latter situation, the leaving group X has become good enough that the former transition state connecting intermediates B and C has become lower in energy than B, which is no longer a stationary point on the potential energy surface for the reaction. Because only one transition state connects starting material A and product C, the reaction is now concerted (albeit very asynchronous in the pictured case) due to the increase in leaving group ability of X.


"Super" and "hyper" leaving groups
The prototypical super leaving group is
Beyond super leaving groups in reactivity lie the "hyper" leaving groups. Prominent among these are

Dialkyl halonium ions have also been isolated and characterized for simple alkyl groups. These compounds, despite their extreme reactivity towards nucleophiles, can be obtained pure in the solid state with very weakly nucleophilic counterions such as SbF−6[9][10] and CHB11Cl−11.[11] The strongly electrophilic nature of these compounds engendered by their attachment to extremely labile R−X (R = alkyl, X = Cl, Br, I) leaving groups is illustrated by their propensity to alkylate very weak nucleophiles. Heating neat samples of (CH3)2Cl+ [CHB11Cl11]− under reduced pressure resulted in methylation of the very poorly nucleophilic carborane anion with concomitant expulsion of the CH3Cl leaving group. Dialkyl halonium hexafluoroantimonate salts alkylate excess alkyl halides to give exchanged products. Their strongly electrophilic nature, along with the instability of primary carbocations generated from ionization of their alkyl groups, points to their possible involvement in Friedel-Crafts alkylation chemistry.[9] The order of increasing lability of these leaving groups is R−I < R−Br < R−Cl.
See also
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-9678550-9-7.
- ^ For example, leaving groups are defined this way in Organic Chemistry: Structure and Function (8th ed.) by P. Vollhardt and N. Schore (p. 231).
- ISSN 0570-0833.
- ^ "Gold Book: electrofuge" (PDF). IUPAC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-06-10.
- ^ Smith, March. Advanced Organic Chemistry 6th ed. (501-502)
- ISSN 0002-7863.
- ISSN 0368-1769.
- ISSN 0936-5214.
- ^ ISSN 0002-7863.
- ISSN 0002-7863.
- S2CID 207048412.