Organic chemistry intimidates students because it appears to be an endless list of reactions to memorise. It isn't. Once you understand how electrons move and why — the mechanisms — the reactions write themselves. This guide shows you exactly how to think about it.
Of all the topics in A Level Chemistry, organic chemistry provokes the most anxiety. Students arrive at the topic convinced it requires memorising hundreds of isolated facts — every reagent, every condition, every product catalogued separately. This approach is exhausting and fragile: one blank in the exam and the entire reaction is lost. The good news is that organic chemistry is, at its core, a subject about electron movement. Master that, and the reactions become logical consequences rather than arbitrary facts.
A reaction mechanism is a step-by-step account of exactly how a chemical reaction occurs at the molecular level — which bonds break, which bonds form, and in what order. Understanding mechanisms allows you to derive products rather than recall them, which is exactly what examiners reward.
A curly arrow represents the movement of an electron pair. The tail sits where the electrons come from; the head points to where they go. A half-headed (fishhook) arrow represents a single electron. Getting these right is essential — misplaced arrows lose marks even when the final product is correct.
Electron-rich species that attack electron-deficient centres. They donate an electron pair to form a new bond. Examples: OH⁻, NH₃, CN⁻, water. The key question is always: where is the electron density, and where is there a partial positive charge to attack?
Electron-deficient species that accept an electron pair. They are attracted to regions of high electron density. Examples: H⁺, carbocations (R⁺), Br₂ (polarised), NO₂⁺. Identifying the electrophile in a reaction tells you where the initial attack will occur.
Short-lived species formed during a reaction that are neither reactants nor final products. Carbocations, carbanions, and radicals are all intermediates. Their stability — primary vs secondary vs tertiary — determines which product forms preferentially, explaining regiochemistry.
Rather than treating each reaction as unique, A Level chemistry groups them into four broad families. Understanding what defines each family — and why reactions within a family share the same logic — dramatically reduces the cognitive load of the subject.
One atom or group is replaced by another. The carbon skeleton stays intact. SN1 (two-step, via carbocation) and SN2 (one-step, backside attack) differ in kinetics and stereochemical outcome.
R–Br + OH⁻ → R–OH + Br⁻
Two reactants combine across a double or triple bond to form a single product — no atoms are lost. Electrophilic addition to alkenes is a core A Level topic; nucleophilic addition to carbonyls is equally important.
CH₂=CH₂ + HBr → CH₃–CH₂Br
Atoms or groups are removed from adjacent carbons to form a new π bond. E1 (unimolecular) and E2 (bimolecular) compete with their substitution counterparts — reaction conditions determine which pathway dominates.
CH₃CH₂Br + KOH(alc) → CH₂=CH₂ + KBr + H₂O
In organic chemistry, oxidation is formally an increase in the number of C–O bonds (or decrease in C–H bonds). Recognising oxidation state changes allows you to select the correct reagent and predict the product tier (aldehyde vs carboxylic acid, for instance).
R–CH₂OH →[K₂Cr₂O₇/H⁺] R–CHO →[excess] R–COOH
Select a reaction type to see the step-by-step mechanism, key electron movements, and required conditions.
Nucleophile approaches from the rear — 180° opposite the leaving group. The nucleophile (OH⁻) is electron-rich; the carbon bearing the leaving group is partially positive (δ+).
Transition state forms — the central carbon is simultaneously bonded to both the incoming nucleophile and the departing leaving group. This is the highest-energy point on the reaction coordinate.
Bond breaks and forms simultaneously — C–Br bond breaks as C–OH bond forms in a single concerted step. The three remaining substituents invert like an umbrella in the wind.
Key distinction from SN1: no carbocation intermediate is formed — the reaction is one step. SN2 is therefore faster for primary halides but slower for tertiary (due to steric hindrance).
Ionisation (rate-determining step) — the C–X bond breaks heterolytically. Both electrons go to the leaving group. A planar carbocation intermediate is formed. Tertiary carbocations are most stable (3 alkyl groups donate electron density).
Nucleophilic attack — the nucleophile attacks the flat carbocation from either face with equal probability, producing a racemic mixture (50:50 R and S enantiomers).
The rate depends only on the concentration of the substrate — the nucleophile is not involved in the slow step, so increasing its concentration does not speed the reaction.
π bond acts as nucleophile — the electron-rich double bond attacks the electrophile (H⁺ from HBr). A curly arrow goes from the π bond to H.
Carbocation forms — the proton attaches to the carbon that gives the more stable (more substituted) carbocation. This is Markovnikov's rule explained mechanistically.
Anion attacks carbocation — Br⁻ attacks the carbocation centre to complete the addition. The π bond is broken; two new σ bonds form.
With Br₂ (no HBr), both carbons of the double bond are attacked — the product is a dibromoalkane with anti addition geometry (bromonium ion intermediate).
Carbonyl carbon is electrophilic — oxygen's electronegativity pulls electron density away from carbon, making it δ+. This is the site of nucleophilic attack.
CN⁻ attacks carbonyl carbon — the electron pair of CN⁻ forms a new C–C bond. The π bond breaks; both electrons go to oxygen, generating an alkoxide intermediate (O⁻).
Protonation of alkoxide — the O⁻ is protonated (by HCN or solvent) to give the hydroxyl group of the hydroxynitrile product.
This reaction is particularly important in synthesis because it extends the carbon chain by one. Examiners often set multi-step synthesis questions that require recognising when to use it.
Base abstracts β-hydrogen — the strong base (OH⁻) removes a proton from the carbon adjacent to the leaving group (β-carbon). The C–H and C–X bonds must be anti-periplanar (180° apart) for this concerted process.
Electrons cascade simultaneously — as the base removes H⁺, the C–H electrons form the π bond, and the C–X bond breaks. All three bond changes happen in one step.
Zaitsev's rule — when multiple β-hydrogens are available, the major product is the more substituted (more stable) alkene. Hofmann's rule applies when a bulky base is used.
The aqueous vs alcoholic distinction is one of the most tested conditions in A Level organic chemistry. Aqueous → substitution; alcoholic → elimination. Never confuse them.
Rather than approaching each question from scratch, apply the same analytical framework every time. This makes your thinking systematic and prevents the most common source of lost marks: jumping to the product without reasoning through the mechanism.
The functional group — not the carbon skeleton — determines how a molecule reacts. Alkenes react via electrophilic addition; halogenoalkanes via substitution or elimination; carbonyls via nucleophilic addition. Locate the functional group first and the reaction type follows immediately.
Ask: is the reagent a nucleophile, electrophile, base, or oxidising agent? Is the solvent aqueous or alcoholic? Is heat applied? Each condition is a clue. Alcoholic KOH at high temperature is screaming "elimination." Cold dilute KMnO₄ says "dihydroxylation," not combustion.
Match functional group + reagent to a mechanism type: SN1, SN2, E1, E2, electrophilic addition, nucleophilic addition, free radical substitution, etc. If you know the mechanism, you know every step that follows.
Never skip this. Even if the final product is correct, missing curly arrows or drawing them in the wrong direction will cost marks. Show all intermediates explicitly — carbocations, radicals, or anionic species — between steps.
Does the mechanism demand inversion (SN2), racemisation (SN1), or anti addition? Are there by-products (water, HBr)? Marking schemes often award a separate mark for correctly identifying the stereochemical outcome or naming the by-product. Don't leave these on the table.
After reviewing hundreds of A Level chemistry scripts, the same errors appear repeatedly. Each one below is avoidable with awareness.
Writing "KOH" without specifying the solvent is incomplete. Aqueous KOH drives substitution; alcoholic KOH drives elimination. The exam expects the full condition — always specify both reagent and solvent.
SN2 produces inversion; SN1 produces racemisation. Electrophilic addition of Br₂ to an alkene proceeds with anti addition via a bromonium ion. If a question uses wedge-and-dash notation, stereochemistry is being tested — respond in kind.
A curly arrow must originate from a bond or lone pair (where electrons are), never from a positive charge or empty orbital. An arrow showing electrons moving from a δ+ carbon to a nucleophile is backwards and will lose the mechanism mark.
Jumping from reactant directly to product without showing the intermediate carbocation or radical will cost marks even if the final product is correct. Show every step explicitly — marking schemes award marks at each stage.
"The H adds to the carbon with more H's" is a memory trick, not an explanation. If asked to explain regioselectivity, describe carbocation stability: the more substituted carbocation is more stable, so the proton adds to give that intermediate.
Understanding the theory is necessary but not sufficient. Exam performance in organic chemistry is built through repeated, deliberate practice — and that practice is most efficient when errors are caught and corrected immediately.
Close your notes and reproduce the complete mechanism for one reaction type each day. The act of retrieval — not re-reading — is what builds durable memory. Start with SN2, then SN1, then electrophilic addition, building outward from the core mechanisms.
A Level mark schemes for organic mechanisms are publicly available. Attempt a question, then compare your curly arrows and intermediates against the mark scheme step by step. Identify exactly which mark you missed and why — not just whether the final answer was right.
Drawing mechanisms on a digital whiteboard with a tutor watching in real time is uniquely powerful. A misplaced curly arrow is caught instantly, before it becomes an ingrained habit. This kind of immediate, specific feedback cannot be replicated by self-study.
Create a single-page diagram connecting functional groups through the reactions that interconvert them: alkene → halogenoalkane → alcohol → aldehyde → carboxylic acid. This "organic chemistry map" gives you a bird's-eye view and makes multi-step synthesis questions far more tractable.
Flashcards work well for reagents and conditions (facts that don't derive from mechanism). They don't replace conceptual understanding of why a reaction proceeds the way it does. Use them to reinforce, not to replace, mechanistic reasoning.
Book a free first session with Dr Fahad Rafiq. We'll identify exactly where your mechanism understanding breaks down and build a structured plan to fix it — before it costs you marks in the exam.
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