Title: Ch. 18 - 1
1Chapter 18
- Reactions at the a Carbon
- of Carbonyl Compounds
- Enols and Enolates
2Keto, enol and enolate structures
- What is a keto form ?
- A structure that contains a carbonyl. E.g.
aldehyde, ketone, ester, acid, etc. - What is an enol ?
- A compound that has an alkene and an OH
attached to the same carbon atom. - What is an enolate ?
- An enol with the proton removed. May be formed
by removing a proton from the a carbon atom of a
keto form.
3The a carbon and a hydrogens
- What is an a carbon ?
- A carbon atom adjacent to a carbonyl.
- What is an a hydrogen ?
- A hydrogen attached to an a carbon atom.
a Hydrogens are weakly acidic (pKa 19 20) due
to the e-withdrawing CO.
4Reactions at the a Carbon of Carbonyl
CompoundsEnols and Enolates
This shows a reaction at the carbonyl carbon
atom.
Tetrahedral intermediate
5- The Acidity of the a Hydrogens of Carbonyl
Compounds Enolate Anions
Comparison of pKas.
6Deprotonation
Removal of a H forms a resonance stabilized
enolate.
Resonance structures for the delocalized enolates
7Protonation
Protonation of a carbon.
Protonation of oxygen.
8- Keto and Enol Tautomers
- Interconvertible keto and enol forms are called
tautomers, and their interconversion is called
tautomerization. - The keto and enol forms are in equilibrium (not
resonance structures) because a proton transfer
occurs.
9E.g.
10E.g.
Resonance stabilization of the enol form
11- Reactions via Enols Enolates
3A. Racemization
Racemization at an a carbon takes place in the
presence of acids or bases
12- Base-Catalyzed Enolization
13- Acid-Catalyzed Enolization
143B. Halogenation at the a Carbon
15- Base-Promoted Halogenation
16- Acid-Promoted Halogenation
173C. The Haloform Reaction
18 19 20 213D. a-Halo Carboxylic Acids The
HellVolhardZelinski Reaction
22 23 24Further reaction of an a halo acid
25- Lithium Enolates
26- Prep. of lithium diisopropylamide (LDA)
274A. Regioselective Formation of Enolates
- Formation of a Kinetic Enolate
(Dimethoxyethane)
This enolate is formed faster because the
hindered strong base removes the less hindered
proton faster.
28- Formation of a Thermodynamic Enolate
This enolate is more stable because the double
bond is more highly substituted. It is the
predominant enolate at equilibrium.
294B. Direct Alkylation of Ketones via Lithium
Enolates
Lithium diisopropylamide LDA or LiN(iPr)2.
304C. Direct Alkylation of Esters
31 32- Enolates of b-Dicarbonyl Compounds
33- a-hydrogens of b-dicarbonyl compounds are more
acidic
34Contributing resonance structures
Resonance hybrid
35- Synthesis of Methyl Ketones The Acetoacetic
Ester Synthesis
36- Synthesis of monosubstituted methyl ketones
37- Synthesis of disubstituted methyl ketones
38(No Transcript)
39- Synthesis of g-keto acids and g-diketones
406A. Acylation
41- Synthesis of Substituted Acetic Acids The
Malonic Ester Synthesis
42- Synthesis of substituted acetic acid
43- Synthesis of monoalkylacetic acid
44- Synthesis of dialkylacetic acid
45 46 47- Further Reactions of Active Hydrogen Compounds
48 49- Synthesis of Enamines Stork Enamine Reactions
50- 2 amines most commonly used to prepare enamines
51(a)
(b)
52 53- Synthesis of g-keto esters
54- Enamines can also be used in Michael additions
55- Summary of Enolate Chemistry
- Formation of an Enolate
Resonance-stabilized enolate
56- Racemization
Enantiomers
57- Halogenation of Aldehydes Ketones
- Specific example haloform reaction
58- Halogenation of Carboxylic Acids The HVZ
Reaction
59- Direct Alkylation via Lithium Enolates
60- Direct Alkylation of Esters
61- Acetoacetic Ester Synthesis
62- Malonic Ester Synthesis
63- Stork Enamine Reaction
64? END OF CHAPTER 18 ?