Everything about Aldol Condensation totally explained
An
Aldol condensation is an
organic reaction in which an
enolate ion reacts with a
carbonyl compound to form a β-hydroxyaldehyde or β-hydroxyketone, followed by
dehydration to give a conjugated
enone.
Aldol condensations are important in
organic synthesis, providing a good way to form
carbon–carbon bonds. The
Robinson annulation reaction sequence features an aldol condensation; the
Wieland-Miescher ketone product is an important starting material for many organic syntheses. Aldol condensations are also commonly discussed in university level
organic chemistry classes as a good bond-forming reaction that demonstrates important
reaction mechanisms. In its usual form, it involves the
nucleophilic addition of a
ketone enolate to an
aldehyde to form a β-hydroxy ketone, or "
aldol" (
aldehyde + alcoh
ol), a structural unit found in many naturally occurring molecules and pharmaceuticals.
The name
aldol condensation is also commonly used, especially in
biochemistry, to refer to the
aldol reaction itself, as catalyzed by
aldolases. However, the aldol reaction isn't formally a
condensation reaction because it doesn't involve the loss of a small molecule.
The reactions between a ketone and an aldehyde (crossed aldol condensation) or between two aldehydes also go by the name
Claisen-Schmidt condensation. These reactions are named after two of its pioneering investigators
Rainer Ludwig Claisen and
J. G. Schmidt, who independently published on this topic in 1880 and 1881. An example is the synthesis of
dibenzylideneacetone.
Mechanism
The first part of this reaction is an
aldol reaction, the second part a dehydration—an
elimination reaction. Dehydration may be accompanied by
decarboxylation when an activated carboxyl group is present. The aldol addition product can be dehydrated via two mechanisms; a strong
base like
potassium t-butoxide,
potassium hydroxide or
sodium hydride in an
enolate mechanism, or in an acid-catalyzed
enol mechanism.
»
Condensation types
It is important to distinguish the Aldol condensation from other
addition reactions to carbonyl compounds.
Aldox process
In industry the
Aldox process developed by
Royal Dutch Shell and
Exxon, converts
propylene and
syngas directly to
2-Ethylhexanol via
hydroformylation to
butyraldehyde, aldol condensation to 2-ethylhexenal and finally
hydrogenation .
»
In one study
crotonaldehyde is directly converted to 2-ethylhexanal in a
palladium /
Amberlyst /
supercritical carbon dioxide system :
»
Scope
Ethyl 2-methylacetoacetate and campholenic aldehyde react in an Aldol condensation. The synthetic procedure is typical for this type of reactions. In the process in addition to water, an equivalent of ethanol and carbondioxide are lost in
decarboxylation.
Ethyl glyoxylate 2 and
diethyl 2-methylglutaconate 1 react to
isoprenetricarboxylic acid 3 (
isoprene skeleton) with
sodium ethoxide. This reaction product is very unstable with initial loss of
carbon dioxide and followed by many secondary reactions. This is believed to be due to
steric strain resulting from the
methyl group and the
carboxylic group in the
cis-dienoid structure.
Occasionally an aldol condensation is buried in a multistep reaction or in
catalytic cycle such as the one sketched below:
In this reaction an
alkynal 1 is converted into a
cycloalkene 7 with a
ruthenium catalyst and the actual condensation takes place with intermediate
3 through
5. Support for the
reaction mechanism is based on
isotope labeling.
The reaction between
menthone and
anisaldehyde is complicated due to
steric shielding of the ketone group. The solution is use of a strong base such as
potassium hydroxide and a very polar solvent such as
DMSO in the reaction below :
Due to
epimerization through a common
enolate ion (intermediate
A) the reaction product has (R,R)
cis configuration and not (R,S) trans as in the starting material. Because it's only the cis isomer that precipitates from solution this product is formed exclusively.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Aldol Condensation'.
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