- Finkelstein reaction
The Finkelstein reaction, named for the German chemist
Hans Finkelstein , is an SN2 reaction that involves the exchange of onehalogen atom for another. Halide exchange is an equilibrium reaction, but the reaction can be driven to completion by taking advantage of differential solubility of halide salts, or by using a large excess of the halide salt.:R-X + X′− unicode|⇌ R-X′ + X−
The classic Finkelstein reaction involves the conversion of an
alkyl chloride or analkyl bromide to analkyl iodide by the addition ofsodium iodide inacetone . Because sodium iodide is soluble in acetone andsodium chloride andsodium bromide are not, the equilibrium is shifted by the precipitation of the insoluble salt. For example,bromoethane can be converted toiodoethane ::CH3CH2Br + NaI → CH3CH2I + NaBr
Alkyl halides differ greatly in the ease with which they undergo the Finkelstein reaction. The reaction works well for primary (except for
neopentyl ) halides, and exceptionally well forallyl ,benzyl , and α-carbonyl halides. Secondary substrates are marginal.Vinyl ,aryl and tertiary alkyl halides are unreactive. Below some relative rates of reaction (NaI in acetone at 60°): ["Solvolytic Displacement Reactions at Saturated Carbon Atoms," Streitwieser, A. "Chem. Rev." 1956, "56", 571] ["The Effect of the Carbonyl and Related Groupson the Reactivity of Halides in SN2 Reactions" Bordwell, F. G.; Brannen, W. T. "J. Am. Chem. Soc." 1964, "86", 4645]In modern usage the definition of the reaction has been expanded to include the conversion of
alcohol s to alkyl halides by first converting the alcohol to asulfonate ester (tosylate s ormesylate s are usually used), and then performing the substitution. The example below is from a synthesis of Chrysochlamic Acid. [Maloney, D. J.; Hecht, S. M. "Org. Lett." 2005, "7",4297]References
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