Anmelden

Introduction

Alkylation of terminal alkynes with primary alkyl halides in the presence of a strong base like sodium amide is one of the common methods for the synthesis of longer carbon-chain alkynes. For example, treatment of 1-propyne with sodium amide followed by reaction with ethyl bromide yields 2-pentyne.

Figure1

The reaction takes place in two steps:

1. The first step is the deprotonation of the terminal alkyne by the strong base forming an acetylide ion.

Figure2

2. The second step is a nucleophilic substitution reaction in which the acetylide ion reacts with the alkyl halide to form a new C–C bond.

Figure3

Reaction Mechanism —SN2 pathway

Acetylide ions are strong bases and can also function as good nucleophiles. The substitution reaction follows an SN2 pathway where the nucleophilic acetylide ion attacks the electrophilic carbon of the primary alkyl halide from the backside.

Figure4

Since this is a concerted process, the nucleophilic attack and the departure of the leaving group takes place simultaneously to form the product with an inverted stereochemistry at the reaction center.

The reaction works best with unhindered alkyl halides like methyl halide and other primary halides. With secondary and tertiary alkyl halides, acetylide ions act as strong bases, in which case E2 elimination is the preferred pathway.

Application in organic synthesis

Alkylation of simple terminal alkynes is a useful method to extend the length of the carbon chain. Acetylene, a terminal alkyne, can be converted to a higher internal alkyne by repeated alkylation as shown below:

Figure5

Tags
AlkynesAlkylation ReactionPrimary Alkyl HalidesStrong BaseSodium AmideCarbon chain Alkynes1 propyneEthyl BromideDeprotonationAcetylide IonNucleophilic Substitution ReactionSN2 PathwayConcerted ProcessInverted StereochemistryUnhindered Alkyl HalidesMethyl HalidePrimary HalidesSecondary Alkyl HalidesTertiary Alkyl HalidesE2 EliminationOrganic Synthesis

Aus Kapitel 9:

article

Now Playing

9.4 : Preparation of Alkynes: Alkylation Reaction

Alkine

9.4K Ansichten

article

9.1 : Struktur und physikalische Eigenschaften von Alkinen

Alkine

9.6K Ansichten

article

9.2 : Nomenklatur der Alkine

Alkine

17.1K Ansichten

article

9.3 : Säuregehalt von 1-Alkinen

Alkine

9.1K Ansichten

article

9.5 : Herstellung von Alkinen: Dehydrohalogenierung

Alkine

15.3K Ansichten

article

9.6 : Elektrophile Zugabe zu Alkinen: Halogenierung

Alkine

8.0K Ansichten

article

9.7 : Elektrophile Zugabe zu Alkinen: Hydrohalogenierung

Alkine

9.7K Ansichten

article

9.8 : Alkine zu Aldehyden und Ketonen: Säurekatalysierte Hydratation

Alkine

8.0K Ansichten

article

9.9 : Alkine zu Aldehyden und Ketonen: Hydroborierung-Oxidation

Alkine

17.4K Ansichten

article

9.10 : Alkine zu Carbonsäuren: Oxidative Spaltung

Alkine

4.6K Ansichten

article

9.11 : Reduktion von Alkinen zu cis-Alkenen: Katalytische Hydrierung

Alkine

7.5K Ansichten

article

9.12 : Reduktion von Alkinen zu trans-Alkenen: Natrium in flüssigem Ammoniak

Alkine

8.9K Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten