JoVE Logo

Sign In

15.16 : Acid-Catalyzed Aldol Addition Reaction

The aldol reaction of a ketone under acidic conditions successfully forms an unsaturated carbonyl as the final product instead of an aldol. The acid-catalyzed aldol reaction is depicted in Figure 1.

Ketone to alcohol conversion via HCl, dehydration results in alkene; reaction mechanism diagram.

Figure 1. The acid-catalyzed aldol addition reaction of ketones.

First, as shown in Figure 2, the acid protonates the ketone molecule to form the protonated ketone. The conjugate base of the acid deprotonates the α carbon of the protonated ketone to form the enol.

Organic reaction mechanism diagram, acid-catalyzed hydration, hydrocarbon conversion.

Figure 2. Formation of the enol.

Next,  as shown in Figure 3, the enol functions as a nucleophile and attacks the second protonated ketone molecule to form a positively charged intermediate. Finally, the loss of a proton generates a β-hydroxy ketone as the aldol addition product, which dehydrates spontaneously under acidic conditions to form the condensation product.

Chemical reaction mechanism, stepwise transformation diagram, illustrating organic intermediate changes.

Figure 3. Nucleophilic addition of the enol and dehydration of the β-hydroxy ketone.

Tags

Acid catalyzed Aldol AdditionKetoneUnsaturated CarbonylProtonated KetoneEnol FormationNucleophilePositively Charged Intermediatehydroxy KetoneDehydrationCondensation Product

From Chapter 15:

article

Now Playing

15.16 : Acid-Catalyzed Aldol Addition Reaction

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.4K Views

article

15.1 : Reactivity of Enols

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Views

article

15.2 : Reactivity of Enolate Ions

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.4K Views

article

15.3 : Types of Enols and Enolates

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.5K Views

article

15.4 : Enolate Mechanism Conventions

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.0K Views

article

15.5 : Regioselective Formation of Enolates

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.5K Views

article

15.6 : Stereochemical Effects of Enolization

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.0K Views

article

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

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.5K Views

article

15.8 : Base-Promoted α-Halogenation of Aldehydes and Ketones

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.4K Views

article

15.9 : Multiple Halogenation of Methyl Ketones: Haloform Reaction

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

1.9K Views

article

15.10 : α-Halogenation of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Overview

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.3K Views

article

15.11 : α-Bromination of Carboxylic Acids: Hell–Volhard–Zelinski Reaction

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.9K Views

article

15.12 : Reactions of α-Halocarbonyl Compounds: Nucleophilic Substitution

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

3.2K Views

article

15.13 : Nitrosation of Enols

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

2.4K Views

article

15.14 : C–C Bond Formation: Aldol Condensation Overview

α-Carbon Chemistry: Enols, Enolates, and Enamines

13.5K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved