Iniciar sesión

As depicted in the figure below, the unsymmetrical ketones can form two possible enolates: less substituted or more substituted enolates. Usually, the thermodynamic enolates are formed from the more substituted α-carbon atom, while the kinetic enolates are formed faster by deprotonation from the less substituted position. The thermodynamic enolates have lower energy, so they are more stable. But the energy required to form kinetic enolates is less.

Figure1

This regioselectivity in enolate formation is essentially an acid-base reaction and is controlled by various factors such as solvent, base, cation, and temperature. Protic solvents and weaker bases favor the formation of thermodynamic enolates, while aprotic solvents and stronger bases favor the kinetic enolates. Thermodynamic enolates are formed at higher temperatures and have longer reaction times because of the higher energy barrier. On the other hand, kinetic enolates are formed at lower temperatures with short reaction times. The conditions favoring thermodynamic enolates encourage a reversible reaction which is not the case with conditions involved for kinetic enolates intermediate.

Tags
Regioselective Enolate FormationThermodynamic EnolatesKinetic EnolatesEnolate StabilitySolvent EffectsBase StrengthTemperature EffectsAcid base ReactionsReversible Vs Irreversible Enolization

Del capítulo 15:

article

Now Playing

15.5 : Regioselective Formation of Enolates

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.4K Vistas

article

15.1 : Reactividad de los enoles

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.8K Vistas

article

15.2 : Reactividad de los iones enolato

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Vistas

article

15.3 : Tipos de Enoles y Enolatos

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Vistas

article

15.4 : Convenciones del mecanismo de enolato

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.9K Vistas

article

15.6 : Efectos estereoquímicos de la enolización

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.9K Vistas

article

15.7 : α-halogenación de aldehídos y cetonas catalizada por ácido

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.4K Vistas

article

15.8 : α-halogenación de aldehídos y cetonas promovida por bases

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.2K Vistas

article

15.9 : Halogenación múltiple de metilcetonas: reacción de haloforme

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.8K Vistas

article

15.10 : α-Halogenación de derivados del ácido carboxílico: descripción general

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.1K Vistas

article

15.11 : α-bromación de ácidos carboxílicos: reacción Hell-Volhard-Zelinski

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Vistas

article

15.12 : Reacciones de compuestos α-halocarbonílicos: sustitución nucleofílica

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.1K Vistas

article

15.13 : Nitrosación de enoles

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Vistas

article

15.14 : Formación de enlaces C-C: descripción general de la condensación aldólica

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

13.2K Vistas

article

15.15 : Reacción de adición aldólica catalizada por bases

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Vistas

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados