Sign In

9.12 : Reduction of Alkynes to trans-Alkenes: Sodium in Liquid Ammonia

Alkynes can be reduced to trans-alkenes using sodium or lithium in liquid ammonia. The reaction, known as dissolving metal reduction, proceeds with an anti addition of hydrogen across the carbon–carbon triple bond to form the trans product. Since ammonia exists as a gas (bp = −33°C) at room temperature, the reaction is carried out at low temperatures using a mixture of dry ice (sublimes at −78°C) and acetone.

When dissolved in liquid ammonia, an alkali metal, such as sodium, dissociates into a cation and a free electron. Ammonia molecules surround the free electrons, creating solvated electrons that impart a blue color to the solution. Solvated electrons are strong reducing agents and readily add to the alkyne triple bond.

Figure1

Figure2

Limitation:

The reduction of terminal alkynes with sodium in liquid ammonia does not proceed as efficiently as the reduction of internal alkynes. This is because terminal alkynes have acidic protons that readily react with the sodium–liquid ammonia mixture to form sodium acetylide. Stoichiometrically, three moles of a terminal alkyne undergo metal-dissolved reduction to give only one mole of the corresponding alkene and two moles of sodium acetylide.

Figure3

Therefore, the reaction conditions need to be modified to completely convert terminal alkynes to alkenes. A common approach involves adding ammonium sulfate to the reaction mixture. The ammonium ion released into the solution protonates the acetylide, thus preserving the terminal alkyne for subsequent reduction.

Tags
AlkynesTrans alkenesSodiumLithiumLiquid AmmoniaDissolving Metal ReductionAnti AdditionCarbon carbon Triple BondTrans ProductLow TemperaturesDry IceAcetoneAlkali MetalCationFree ElectronSolvated ElectronsReducing AgentsBlue ColorLimitationTerminal AlkynesInternal AlkynesAcidic ProtonsSodium AcetylideStoichiometricallyReaction ConditionsModifiedAmmonium Sulfate

From Chapter 9:

article

Now Playing

9.12 : Reduction of Alkynes to <em>trans</em>-Alkenes: Sodium in Liquid Ammonia

Alkynes

8.5K Views

article

9.1 : Structure and Physical Properties of Alkynes

Alkynes

8.0K Views

article

9.2 : Nomenclature of Alkynes

Alkynes

15.8K Views

article

9.3 : Acidity of 1-Alkynes

Alkynes

8.6K Views

article

9.4 : Preparation of Alkynes: Alkylation Reaction

Alkynes

8.6K Views

article

9.5 : Preparation of Alkynes: Dehydrohalogenation

Alkynes

14.4K Views

article

9.6 : Electrophilic Addition to Alkynes: Halogenation

Alkynes

7.5K Views

article

9.7 : Electrophilic Addition to Alkynes: Hydrohalogenation

Alkynes

9.2K Views

article

9.8 : Alkynes to Aldehydes and Ketones: Acid-Catalyzed Hydration

Alkynes

7.6K Views

article

9.9 : Alkynes to Aldehydes and Ketones: Hydroboration-Oxidation

Alkynes

16.2K Views

article

9.10 : Alkynes to Carboxylic Acids: Oxidative Cleavage

Alkynes

4.3K Views

article

9.11 : Reduction of Alkynes to <em>cis</em>-Alkenes: Catalytic Hydrogenation

Alkynes

7.1K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved