Markovnikov vs Anti-Markovnikov: Clear Rule Guide & Mechanism

Markovnikov adds the hydrogen to the carbon that already has more hydrogens; Anti-Markovnikov flips the rule and places the hydrogen on the carbon that had fewer.

Students swap them because “anti” sounds like a rebellious exception, so they assume every reverse addition is Anti-Markovnikov, even when reagents like peroxides aren’t present.

Key Differences

Markovnikov: electrophilic addition via carbocation stability; yields more substituted haloalcohol. Anti-Markovnikov: free-radical or hydroboration pathway; yields less-substituted product.

Which One Should You Choose?

Need the more branched alcohol for fragrance synthesis? Go Markovnikov. Making a linear fatty alcohol for biodegradable detergents? Pick Anti-Markovnikov.

Examples and Daily Life

Adding HBr to 1-butene gives 2-bromobutane (Markovnikov). Switch to HBr + peroxide and you get 1-bromobutane—handy for fire-resistant hydraulic fluids.

Does peroxide always trigger Anti-Markovnikov?

Only for HBr. HCl and HI ignore the peroxide effect.

Can hydroboration be called Anti-Markovnikov?

Mechanistically yes, but chemists prefer “hydroboration–oxidation” to stay precise.

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