로그인

By replacing an α-hydrogen with a halogen, acid-catalyzed α-halogenation of aldehydes or ketones yields a monohalogenated product

In the first step of the mechanism, the acid protonates the carbonyl oxygen resulting in a resonance-stabilized cation, which subsequently loses an α-hydrogen to form an enol tautomer. The C=C bond in an enol is highly nucleophilic because of the electron-donating nature of the –OH group. Consequently, the double bond attacks an electrophilic halogen to form a monohalogenated carbocation. In the final step, deprotonation of the carbocation yields the α-halo aldehydes or ketones.

Note that the enol formation is the rate-determining step of the reaction, and the halogen is not involved in the rate-limiting step. Therefore, the initial rates of the α-halogenation are independent of the type and concentration of halogen. Overall, the reaction follows second-order kinetics, wherein the rates depend on the concentration of the carbonyl and the acid.

The addition of a second halogen is unfavorable as the carbocation intermediate formed by the reaction of a monohalogenated enol with halogens is highly destabilized by the electron-withdrawing polar effect of two halogen atoms. Interestingly, the acid formed as a by-product of this reaction can ultimately catalyze the first step of enolization, thus turning the reaction autocatalytic. The unsymmetrical ketones undergo α-halogenation at the more substituted carbon by the preferential formation of a thermodynamic enol. As shown below, the acid-catalyzed α-halogenation reaction also works well to convert ketones to α,β‒unsaturated ketones via E2 elimination reactions forming a new π bond.

Figure1

Tags
Acid catalyzed halogenationAldehydesKetonesMonohalogenated ProductResonance stabilized CationEnol TautomerNucleophilic C C BondElectrophilic HalogenCarbocationDeprotonationRate determining StepSecond order KineticsUnsymmetrical KetonesThermodynamic EnolE2 Eliminationunsaturated Ketones

장에서 15:

article

Now Playing

15.7 : Acid-Catalyzed α-Halogenation of Aldehydes and Ketones

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.4K Views

article

15.1 : Enols의 반응성

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.8K Views

article

15.2 : Enolate 이온의 반응성

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Views

article

15.3 : 에놀(Enol)과 에놀라산(Enolate)의 종류

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Views

article

15.4 : Enolate 메커니즘 규칙

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.9K Views

article

15.5 : Enolates의 위치 선택적 형성

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.4K Views

article

15.6 : Enolization의 입체화학적 효과

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.9K Views

article

15.8 : 알데히드와 케톤의 염기 촉진 α-할로겐화

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.2K Views

article

15.9 : 메틸 케톤의 다중 할로겐화: Haloform 반응

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.8K Views

article

15.10 : α-Carboxylic Acid Derivatives의 할로겐화: 개요

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.1K Views

article

15.11 : 카르복실산의 α-브롬화: 지옥-볼하르트-젤린스키 반응

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Views

article

15.12 : α-할로카르보닐 화합물의 반응: 친핵성 치환

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.1K Views

article

15.13 : 에놀의 니트로화(nitrosation)

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.3K Views

article

15.14 : C–C 결합 형성: Aldol 응축 개요

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

13.2K Views

article

15.15 : 염기 촉매 알돌 첨가 반응

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유