- Acetalisation
Acetalisation is an
organic reaction that involves the formation of anacetal orketal . One way of acetal formation is thenucleophilic addition of analcohol to aketone or analdehyde . Acetalisation is often used inorganic synthesis to create aprotecting group because it is a reversible reaction.Acetalisation of carbonyl groups by alcohols
Acetalisation is
acid catalysed with elimination of water. The reaction can be driven to the acetal when water is removed from the reaction system either byazeotropic distillation or trapping water withmolecular sieve s oraluminium oxide . The general reaction mechanism for acetalisation of a carbonyl group is shown below.The carbonyl group in 1 abstracts a proton from
hydrochloric acid . The protonated carbonyl group 2 is activated fornucleophilic addition of the alcohol. The structures 2a and 2b aremesomer s. Afterdeprotonation of 3 by water thehemiacetal orhemiketal 4 is formed. The hydroxyl group in 4 is protonated leading to theoxonium ion 6 which accepts a second alcohol group to 7 with a final deprotonation to the acetal 8. The reverse reaction takes place by adding water in the same acidic medium. Acetals are stable towards basic media. In a transacetalisation or crossacetalisation a diol reacts with an acetal or two different acetals react with each other. Again this is possible because all the reaction steps are equilibria.Examples
One typical example is the acetalisation of 3-bromo-3-methyl-butan-2-one:
Other acetalisation examples can be found in
mutarotation andcarbohydrate acetalisation .References
[1] 2-(1-Bromo-1-methyl-ethyl)-2-methyl- [1,3] dioxolane Juan M. Castro, Pablo J. Linares-Palomino, Sofia Salido, Joaquan Altarejos Manuel Nogueras, Adolfo Sanchez
Molbank 2004, M387 [http://www.mdpi.net/molbank/molbank2004/m0387.htm]open access publication.
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