1. You can recognize benzene and substituted examples, provide a proper name for multiply substituted benzenes, or draw a structure from the name of a substituted benzene.
  2. You understand the thermodynamic explanation of aromaticity derived from heats of hydrogenation of cyclohexene, cyclohexadiene, and benzene. This is the first experimental means of identifying a molecule as aromatic.
  3. You understand that the origin of this stability for benzene and other aromatic molecules is based on the cyclic array of p atomic orbitals creating a set of molecular orbitals with unusual stability.
    Visualization: Pi MOs of Benzene.
  4. You know Hückel's rule for determining whether a cyclic array of pi electrons is aromatic: 4n + 2 electrons will be aromatic and specially stabilized; 4n electrons will be destabilized and antiaromatic.
  5. You can classify any molecule as aromatic or antiaromatic (if there is a cyclic array of pi electrons) or nonaromatic (if the pi electrons do not complete a ring).
  6. You can extend this classification to include carbocations and carbanions by recognizing the participation of a p orbital in the cyclic array.
  7. You understand the general mechanism for electrophilic aromatic substitution, and can apply it to any electrophile reacting with benzene.
  8. You know that the observation of electrophilic aromatic substitution (instead of electrophilic addition) is the second major criterion for aromaticity.
  9. You know reaction conditions for the following electrophilic aromatic substitutions:
    • Halogenation
    • Nitration
    • Sulfonation
    • Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
    • Friedel-Crafts Acylation

Recommended end-of-chapter problems: 15-38, 15-41, 15-42, 15-47, 15-48, 15-51, 15-59, 15-60, 15-67.
Friday fun: Kekule's 1890 description of his ouroboros dream.
Friday fun: Antiaromaticity and Homoaromaticity. Pushing our bonding models to the limit.

Last updated: 12/27/2019