Question detail

What is the purpose of using curly arrows in organic reaction mechanisms?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Introduction to organic chemistry

Question

  1. A. To represent the movement of electrons
  2. B. To indicate the formation of bonds
  3. C. To show the breaking of bonds
  4. D. To illustrate molecular shapes

Answer

To represent the movement of electrons

Explanation

The correct option is To represent the movement of electrons. To represent the movement of electrons is the best answer because it directly supports the AQA A-Level Chemistry objective to use curly arrows to represent electron movement in mechanisms. This reasoning is anchored to Isomerism and reaction mechanisms in Introduction to organic chemistry, and it separates mechanism from similar A-Level ideas rather than relying on a vague recall statement. Other options are weaker if they use the wrong evidence, calculation, mechanism, observation, unit, or conclusion for this subtopic.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Curly Arrows

Students often forget to show the correct starting point for curly arrows, leading to incorrect electron movement representation.

Always start curly arrows from the electron pair or lone pair and point them towards the atom or bond they are moving to. For example, in a nucleophilic attack, the arrow should start from the nucleophile's lone pair and point to the electrophile's positive center.

Related flashcards

Flashcard 1 of 5

Press Space to flip, arrows to move

Related practice questions

Question 1 of 5

Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.

0 of 4 attempted
understanding MCQ 1: represent electron movement in… |… | ExamCompanion