- Superbase
In
chemistry , a superbase is an extremely strong base. There is no commonly accepted definition for what qualifies as a superbase, but most chemists would acceptsodium hydroxide as a 'benchmark' base just assulfuric acid is a 'benchmark' acid (seesuperacid ). The hydroxide ion is a good benchmark because it is the strongest base that can exist in a water solution. Stronger bases are neutralized by water acting as an acid, to produce a corresponding hydroxide (and protonated superbase). Another use that can define superbase isstoichiometric α-deprotonation of acarbonyl compound into anenolate , something that cannot be done by "regular bases". Despite this, the term still doesn't have a standard chemical definition, so for exampleProton Sponge may be called "superbase".There are three main classes of superbases: organic,
organometallic , andinorganic .Organometallic compounds of reactive metals are usually superbases, for example
organolithium and organomagnesiums (Grignard reagent s). Another type of organic superbase has a reactive metal exchanged for a hydrogen on a heteroatom, such as oxygen (unstabilizedalkoxide s) or nitrogen (lithium diisopropylamide ).Reactions involving superbases are usually water-sensitive, conducted under an inert atmosphere and at a low temperature. A desirable property in many cases is low nucleophilic reactivity, i.e. a
non-nucleophilic base . Unhindered alkyllithiums, for example, cannot be used with electrophiles such ascarbonyl groups, because they attack the electrophiles as nucleophiles.In organic synthesis, the
Schlosser base (or Lochmann-Schlosser base), i.e. the combination of "tert"-butyllithium andpotassium tert-butoxide , is a commonly used superbase. "tert"-Butyllithium undergoes a cation exchange with potassium tert-butoxide giving tert-butyl potassium and lithium tert-butoxide, an exchange driven by lithium's affinity for the alkoxide oxygen. Replacement of the lithium cation with potassium causes the tert-butyl anion to acquire greater ionic character and thus greater basicity.Inorganic superbases are typically salts with highly charged, small negative ions, e.g.
lithium nitride , which has extreme negative charge density and so is highly attracted to acids, like the aqueoushydronium ion . Alkali and earth alkali metal hydrides (sodium hydride ,calcium hydride ) are superbases.ee also
*
Superacid
*Phosphazene
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