Title: 18.7 ? Halogenation of Aldehydes and Ketones
118.7 ? Halogenation ofAldehydes and Ketones
2General Reaction
X2
HX
- X2 is Cl2, Br2, or I2.
- Substitution is specific for replacement of
??hydrogen. - Catalyzed by acids. One of the products is an
acid (HX) the reaction is autocatalytic. - Not a free-radical reaction.
3Example
H2O
(61-66)
4Example
CHCl3
HBr
Br2
(80)
- Notice that it is the proton on the ? carbon
that is replaced, not the one on the carbonyl
carbon.
518.8 Mechanism of ? Halogenation ofAldehydes
and Ketones
6Mechanism of ? Halogenation
Experimental Facts
- specific for replacement of H at the ? carbon
- equal rates for chlorination, bromination, and
iodination - first order in ketone zero order in halogen
7Mechanism of ? Halogenation
Two stages
- first stage is conversion of aldehyde or ketone
to the corresponding enol is rate-determining - second stage is reaction of enol with halogen
is faster than the first stage
8Mechanism of ? Halogenation
9Mechanism of ? Halogenation
Two stages
- first stage is conversion of aldehyde or ketone
to the corresponding enol is rate-determining - second stage is reaction of enol with halogen
is faster than the first stage
examine second stage now
10Reaction of enol with Br2
- carbocation is stabilized by electron release
from oxygen
11Loss of proton from oxygen completes the process
1218.9The Haloform Reaction
13The Haloform Reaction
- Under basic conditions, halogenation of a methyl
ketone often leads to carbon-carbon bond
cleavage. - Such cleavage is called the haloform reaction
because chloroform, bromoform, or iodoform is one
of the products.
14Example
Br2, NaOH, H2O
CHBr3
H
(71-74)
15The Haloform Reaction
- The haloform reaction is sometimes used as a
method for preparing carboxylic acids, but works
well only when a single enolate can form.
yes
yes
no
16Mechanism
- First stage is substitution of all available
??hydrogens by halogen
X2, HO
X2, HO
X2, HO
17Mechanism
- Formation of the trihalomethyl ketone is
followed by its hydroxide-induced cleavage
1818.10Some Chemical and StereochemicalConsequence
s of Enolization
19Hydrogen-Deuterium Exchange
4D2O
KOD, heat
4DOH
20Mechanism
21Mechanism
22Stereochemical Consequences of Enolization
H3O
50 R50 S
50 R50 S
100 R
H2O, HO
23Enol is achiral
R
24Enol is achiral
H3C
H
CC6H5
S
50
CH3CH2
50
R
25Results of Rate Studies
- Equal rates for racemization H-D
exchange bromination iodination - Enol is intermediate and its formation is
rate-determining
2618.11Effects of Conjugation in ???-Unsaturated
Aldehydes and Ketones
27Relative Stability
- aldehydes and ketones that contain a
carbon-carbon double bond are more stable when
the double bond is conjugated with the carbonyl
group than when it is not - compounds of this type are referred to as ?,?
unsaturated aldehydes and ketones
28Relative Stability
29Acrolein
30Acrolein
31Acrolein
32Acrolein
33Resonance Description
34Properties
- ???-Unsaturated aldehydes and ketones are more
polar than simple aldehydes and ketones. - ???-Unsaturated aldehydes and ketones contain
two possible sites for nucleophiles to attack - carbonyl carbon
- ?-carbon
35Dipole Moments
?
?
?
?
?
Butanal
trans-2-Butenal
- greater separation of positive and negative
charge
3618.12Conjugate Addition to ???-Unsaturated
Carbonyl Compounds
37Nucleophilic Addition to ???-Unsaturated
Aldehydes and Ketones
- 1,2-addition (direct addition)
- nucleophile attacks carbon of CO
- 1,4-addition (conjugate addition)
- nucleophile attacks ?-carbon
38Kinetic versus Thermodynamic Control
- attack is faster at CO
- attack at ?-carbon gives the more stable product
391,2-addition
- formed faster
- major product under conditions of kinetic
control (i.e. when addition is not readily
reversible)
401,4-addition
- enol
- goes to keto form under reaction conditions
411,4-addition
- keto form is isolated product of 1,4-addition
- is more stable than 1,2-addition product
421,2-addition
1,4-addition
CO is stronger than CC
431,2-Addition
- observed with strongly basic nucleophiles
- Grignard reagents
- LiAlH4
- NaBH4
- Sodium acetylide
- strongly basic nucleophiles add irreversibly
44Example
1. THF2. H3O
451,4-Addition
- observed with weakly basic nucleophiles
- cyanide ion (CN)
- thiolate ions (RS)
- ammonia and amines
- azide ion (N3)
- weakly basic nucleophiles add reversibly
46Example
(93-96)
47Example
O
C6H5CH2SH
HO, H2O
(58)
4818.13Addition of Carbanions to???-Unsaturated
Carbonyl CompoundsThe Michael Reaction
49Michael Addition
- Stabilized carbanions, such as those derived
from ?-diketones undergo conjugateaddition to
?,?-unsaturated ketones.
50Example
KOH, methanol
(85)
51Michael Addition
- The Michael reaction is a useful method
forforming carbon-carbon bonds. - It is also useful in that the product of the
reaction can undergo an intramolecularaldol
condensation to form a six-membered ring. One
such application is called the Robinsonannulation
.
52Example
NaOHheat
not isolateddehydrates under reaction conditions
5318.14Conjugate Addition of Organocopper
Reagentsto ???-Unsaturated Carbonyl Compounds
54Addition of Organocopper Reagents
to???-Unsaturated Aldehydes and Ketones
- The main use of organocopper reagents is toform
carbon-carbon bonds by conjugate addition to
?,?-unsaturated ketones.
55Example
LiCu(CH3)2
(98)
56End of Chapter 18