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Aromaticity. Reactions of Benzene
Introduction

Certain compounds with unusually large resonance energies belong to a class of compounds called aromatic compounds. This chapter starts by discussing the criteria a compound must meet in order to be classified as being aromatic. It then discusses some chemical consequences of aromaticity and explains, using MO theory, why aromatic compounds are so stable.

The most frequently encountered aromatic compound is benzene. The chapter concludes by looking at the reactions of benzene. Because of the stability of benzene’s aromatic ring, benzene undergoes reactions that are quite different than the reactions that alkenes and dienes (other compounds that have carbon–carbon π bonds) undergo.



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