Reactive intermediate

In chemistry a reactive intermediate is a short-lived high energy highly reactive molecule. When generated in a chemical reaction it will quickly convert into a more stable molecule. Only in exceptional cases these compounds can be isolated and stored. Reactive intermediates help explain how a chemical reaction takes place.

Most chemical reactions takes more than one "step" to complete, and an reactive intermediate is an unstable product that only exists in one of the intermediate steps. It differs from the reactants and products in the way that it cannot be isolated, and is thus not directly observable. An example would be

A + 2B → C + D + E,

broken down to steps:

A + B → C + X
X → D + Y
B + Y → E.

Here X and Y are intermediates.

Contents

The main carbon reactive intermediates.

based on carbon

common features

The other reactive intermediates.

References

See also: Reactive intermediate, Aryne, Cage effect (chemistry), Carbanion, Carbene, Carbenoid, Carbocation, Carbon, Carbyne, Chemical compound