dasdas

Master Organic Chemistry Reaction Guide

Addition of Grignard reagents to aldehydes to give secondary alcohols

Description: Addition of a Grignard reagent to an aldehyde results in a new C–C bond an a secondary alcohol after addition of acid.

The rest of this page is available to MOC Members only.
To get access to this page, plus over 2500 quizzes, the Reaction Encyclopedia, Org 1 / Org 2 summary sheets, and flashcards, sign up here for only 30 cents/ day!

 

 

 

Comments

Comment section

9 thoughts on “Addition of Grignard reagents to aldehydes to give secondary alcohols

  1. The Barbier reaction is supposed to be analogous to the Grignard reaction but instead uses powdered Zinc instead of pulverized Mg and is not deactivated by H2O. What would a mechanism look like? I know its not exactly known but would it be similar to this mechanism but switching out Mg with Zn? I know one research paper proposed free radicals however that seems unlikely to me.

  2. I wonder:
    Why grignard reagent does not act as a nucleophile when an alkyl halide is the electrophile.
    Why acetylide ion attacks alkyl halides well, but not acyl groups?

    1. Acetylide ions will attack acyl groups.

      Re: grignard reagents, they tend to be clusters in solution and also equilibrate between various forms (Schlenk equilibrium). What often happens is that you see them acting as a base (breaking C-H) or pumping electrons into the alkyl halide via single electron transfer. Substitution reactions to break C-X are more sterically demanding (have to overlap with C-X sigma-star orbital) and this process is slower than the other pathways.
      Much better to use copper reagents (organocuprates) which don’t suffer from these problems as much.

  3. With a formaldehyde instead of an aldehyde, I assume the main product will lose one of its R’s and instead have an H, right?

  4. so the grignard will be a part of the aldehyde and then it will attack the carbon double bonded to the oxygen

    1. The Mg adds by oxidative insertion to the Br to form the Grignard. Then, that reacts with the carbonyl carbon – yes.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.