A University of Newcastle-led team says the textbook inductive effect fails to match modern computer simulations in important cases, challenging a core explanation of how electrons redistribute within molecules.
Using computational analyses, the researchers argue molecular behavior is often explained better by the overall electron distribution across a molecule than by electron effects transmitted through long chains of bonds.
The study, published May 14 in the Journal of Chemical Education, does not overturn organic chemistry but targets a long-used teaching shortcut that the authors say can leave students with an incomplete model.
Because organic chemistry underpins drug discovery, materials science and agricultural chemistry, the proposed framework could reshape how foundational concepts are taught and how researchers interpret molecular behavior.
A key chemistry rule is overturned. Could this rewrite the playbook for creating new drugs and advanced materials?
After nearly a century, why did it take modern computers to disprove a chemistry concept taught to millions?
If a century-old chemistry concept is wrong, how long will it take for textbooks to catch up with science?
Chemistry Textbooks Challenged: Inductive Effect Proven Short-Range and Alkyl Groups Electron-Withdrawing
Overview
Recent research led by teams at Cardiff University and the University of Newcastle, Australia, has fundamentally challenged the century-old concept of the inductive effect in organic chemistry. The new findings reveal that the inductive effect is mainly a short-range phenomenon, limited to a single bond, and that alkyl groups are actually electron-withdrawing, not donating as previously thought. This shift highlights the greater importance of polarizability and solvent effects in determining molecular behavior. As a result, educators are encouraged to update how they teach these concepts, aiming to improve student understanding and foster innovation in chemical research.