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Q79 (CDS-I/2002) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Organic chemistry basics Answer Verified

Benzene reacts with chlorine in the presence of an iron catalyst to produce

Result
Your answer: —  Â·  Correct: C
Explanation

Benzene reacts with chlorine in the presence of an iron catalyst (typically iron(III) chloride, FeCl3) to produce chlorobenzene through a mechanism known as electrophilic aromatic substitution [t1][t2]. In this process, the iron catalyst acts as a Lewis acid that activates the chlorine molecule (Cl2) to form a highly reactive chloronium ion (Cl+) [t3]. This electrophile then attacks the electron-rich benzene ring, forming an unstable sigma complex or arenium ion [t3][t4]. To restore the stable aromaticity of the ring, the complex loses a proton (H+), resulting in the final product, chlorobenzene [t3]. While benzene hexachloride can be formed via addition under UV light and benzyl chloride is typically formed from toluene, the specific use of an iron catalyst facilitates the substitution of a hydrogen atom on the benzene ring with a chlorine atom [t2][t5].

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