Title: Aldehydes and Ketones II' Oxidation and Reduction: Synthesis
1Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones
2Aldehydes can be prepared by reduction.
- This would be desirable to do
- The problem is, how to stop the reduction at the
aldehyde state, without reducing all the way to a
primary alcohol?
3Rosenmund Reduction
The catalyst is selectively poisoned. The
reaction generally goes in very good
yield. Quinoline is
4Example
5Another, similar, method uses a new reagent
Lithium Tri-tert-butoxy-aluminum Hydride
6- The tert-butyl groups provide steric hindrance.
- This diminishes the ability of the reagent to act
as a hydride donor (as compared with LiAlH4). - Also, there is only one reducing hydrogen per
molecule of this reagent.
7Example
8Reduction of Esters to Aldehydes
An ester is reduced by lithium aluminum hydride
to yield two different alcohols
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10- The lithium aluminum hydride reduces the acyl
part of the ester to a primary alcohol. - The alkyl part of the ester simply drops off as a
second alcohol -- it is not reduced in this
reaction. - You would generally do this reaction to prepare
the primary alcohol deriving from the acyl
portion of the ester.
11- Lithium aluminum hydride is such a powerful
reducing agent that it reduces the ester through
two 2-electron reduction stages, all the way to
the alcohol
12- Chemists have wondered if it might be possible to
modify the structure of the aluminum hydride
reducing agent so as to reduce an ester through
one 2-electron reduction step, but no further. - You have already seen a similar modification in
the example of lithium tri-tert-butoxyaluminum
hydride.
13Among the most useful modified aluminum hydride
reducing agents is Diisobutylaluminum Hydride,
also known as DIBALH.
14- Reductions are typically carried out in toluene
or hexane solution at -78 C (dry ice-acetone
bath). - The reduction is followed by hydrolysis with
aqueous acid to decompose the aluminum salts and
liberate the aldehyde. - After hydrolysis, the reaction is allowed to warm
to room temperature.
15Reduction of Esters to Aldehydes
16In more detail...
17Reduction of esters with DIBALH has become a
valuable method for the synthesis of aldehydes.
18Example
19If the temperature of the reaction is not
maintained at dry ice temperatures, the ester
will be reduced all the way to the alcohol.
20This will not lose an alkoxy group at low
temperatures -- thus, no leaving group!
21Loss of the alkoxy group does not happen until
after the hydride reagent has been destroyed with
acid, so a second reduction step cannot
happen. Thus, temperature control is critical
for the selective reduction of an ester to an
aldehyde.
22Hydrolysis Step
23Nitriles can also be reduced to aldehydes, using
DIBALH
24Ketone Synthesis Using Organometallic Reagents
- We want to do
- Too bad it doesnt work! No ketone is obtained.
25Instead, we get alcohol
The Grignard reagent reacted twice.
26- The problem is that the organomagnesium reagent
is too reactive -- we need something milder. - So, we use an organocadmium reagent, instead
27Ketone Synthesis using Organocadmium Reagents
28Example
29Alternative
Apparently, both Grignard addition steps are too
slow at low temperature. But, the ferric
chloride catalyzes the first addition, making it
proceed fast enough to be useful. Ferric
chloride does not catalyze the second addition,
so it remains very slow and is not observed!
30Lithium dialkylcuprates can also be used to
prepare ketones from acid chlorides.
31Ketone Synthesis using Lithium Dialkylcuprates
32Example
33Synthesis Problem
34Another Synthesis Problem
35Are We Having Fun Yet?
36Lets Make Some Drugs!
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