Carbonyl Reaction
Carbonyl Reaction
Carbonyl Reaction
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• The drive to form a molecule of stable nitrogen gas
(N2) causes the leaving group of a diazonium ion to be
easily displaced by a wide variety of nucleophiles.
The mechanism by which a nucleophile displaces the
diazonium group depends on the nucleophile: Some
displacements involve phenyl cations, while others
involve radicals.
NH2 N N Cl F
Cu
Cl
Br
H O+
CuCN
KI
HCN
,H
3
Br
I Br
OH CN
3
Reactions of Aromatic Side Chains
• An alkyl group bonded to a benzene ring can be
oxidized to a carboxyl group. When an organic
compound is oxidized, either the number of C-O, C-
N, or C-X (where X denotes a halogen atom) bonds
increases or the number of C-H bonds decreases.
• Commonly used oxidizing agents are potassium
permanganate (KMnO4) or acidic solutions of sodium
dichromate (H+, Na2Cr2O7) because the benzene ring
is so stable, it will not be oxidized—only the alkyl
group is oxidized.
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• Regardless of the length of the alkyl substituent, it
will be oxidized to a -COOH group, provided that a
hydrogen is bonded to the benzylic carbon. If the alkyl
group lacks a benzylic hydrogen, the oxidation reaction
will not occur because the first step in the oxidation
reaction is removal of a hydrogen from the benzylic
carbon.
• When two alkyl groups are present on the ring, both are oxidized.
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CHAPTER 8
8. CARBONYL REACTIONS
Introduction
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Introduction cont’d
8
Introduction cont’d
9
Introduction cont’d
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Introduction cont’d
1. Addition Reactions
2. Addition-elimination and
3. Enolization-ketonization
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8.1. Addition Reactions
8.1.1. Cyanohydrins: Hydrogen cyanide adds
to aldehydes and ketones to form
cyanohydrins.
• forms a product with one more carbon atom
than the reactant.
Mechanism
8.2.1. Wittig reaction
• An aldehyde or a ketone reacts with a
phosphonium ylide (pronounced ―ILL-id‖) to
form an alkene.
• An ylide is a compound that has opposite
charges on adjacent covalently bonded
atoms with complete octets.
• The ylide can also be written in the double
bonded form because phosphorus can have
more than eight valence electrons.
• The reaction of an aldehyde or a ketone with
a phosphonium ylide to form an alkene is
called a Wittig reaction.
• The overall reaction change of C=O bond
with C=C
• Evidence has accumulated that the Wittig
reaction is a concerted [2 + 2]
cycloaddition reaction
• It is called a [2 + 2] cycloaddition reaction
because, of the four Π electrons involved in
the cyclic transition state
• Elimination of triphenylphosphine oxide
forms the alkene product.
• The phosphonium ylide needed for a
particular synthesis is obtained by an SN2
reaction between triphenylphosphine and an
alkyl halide with the appropriate number of
carbon atoms.
• A proton on the carbon adjacent to the
positively charged phosphorus atom is
sufficiently acidic (pKa = 35) to be removed
by a strong base such as butyllithium.
• If two sets of reagents are available for the
synthesis of an alkene, it is better to use
the one that requires the less sterically
hindered alkyl halide for synthesis of the
ylide. Why?
• The Wittig reaction is a very powerful way
to make an alkene because the reaction is
completely regioselective—the double bond
will be in only one place.
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• Carbonyl compounds that form enols undergo
substitution reactions at the α-carbon.
• When an α-substitution reaction takes place under
acidic conditions, water removes a proton from the
α-carbon of the protonated carbonyl compound.
• The nucleophilic enol then reacts with an
electrophile.
• The overall reaction is an α-substitution reaction in
which one electrophile (E+) is substituted for
another (H+).
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Acid-catalyzed α-substitution reaction
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Halogenation
• When a ketone is treated with a halogen and base, an α-
halogenation reaction occurs.
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Alkylation
• Alkylation at α-carbon is carried out by first removing a
proton from the α-carbon with a strong base such as
lithium diisopropylamide (LDA), then adding the
appropriate alkyl halide. Because the alkylation is an SN2
reaction, it works best with methyl halides and primary
alkyl halides.
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• Ketones are less susceptible than aldehydes to
attack by nucleophiles, so aldol additions occur
more slowly with ketones.
• The relatively high reactivity of aldehydes in
competing aldol addition reactions is what causes
them to give low yields of α-alkylation products,
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Mixed Aldol Addition
• If two different carbonyl compounds are used
in an aldol addition, four products can be formed
because each enolate can react both with
another molecule of the carbonyl compound from
which the enolate was formed and with the other
carbonyl compound.
• In the following example, both carbonyl
compound A and carbonyl compound B can lose a
proton from an α-carbon to form enolates A- and
B-; A- can react with either A or B, and B- can
react with either A or B:
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The Claisen Condensation
• When two molecules of an ester undergo a
condensation reaction, the reaction is called a
Claisen condensation. The product of a
Claisen condensation β-keto is a ester.
• Example
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Crossed Claisen Condensations
• Claisen condensation reactions that occur
between two different partners are called
crossed Claisen condensations.
• Just as we saw with aldol reactions, crossed
Claisen condensation reactions also produce a
mixture of products and are only efficient if one
of the two following criteria are met:
• If one ester has no α protons and cannot form an
enolate, for example;
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