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Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C C triple bond.

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Alkynes
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Page 1: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkynes

Page 2: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkynes• Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a CC triple bond

Page 3: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkynes• Given the presence of two pi bonds and their associated

electron density, alkynes are similar to alkenes in their ability to act as a nucleophile

• Converting pi bonds to sigma bonds generally makes a molecule more stable.

Page 4: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkyne Uses• Acetylene is the simplest alkyne• It is used in blow torches and as a precursor for the

synthesis of more complex alkynes• More than 1000 different alkyne natural products have

been isolated• One example is histrionicotoxin,

which can be isolated from South American frogs and is used on poison-tipped arrows by South American tribes

Page 5: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• An example of a synthetic alkyne is ethynylestradiol

Alkyne Uses

• Ethynylestradiol is the active ingredient in many birth control pills

• The presence of the triple bond increases the potency of the drug compared to the natural analog

Page 6: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

10.3 Alkyne Acidity• Recall that terminal alkynes have a lower pKa than other

hydrocarbons

• Acetylene is 19 pKa units more acidic than ethylene

Page 7: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkyne Acidity• Because acetylene (pKa=25) is still much weaker than

water (pKa=15.7), a strong base is needed to make it react, and water cannot be used as the solvent

• Negative charge is stabilized in sp hybridized orbital

Page 8: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Alkyne Acidity• Use ARIO to rationalize the equilibria below

• A bases conjugate acid pKa must be greater than 25 for it to be able to deprotonate a terminal alkyne

Page 9: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Preparation of Alkynes• Like alkenes, alkynes can also be prepared by

elimination

Page 10: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Preparation of Alkynes• Such eliminations usually occur via an E2 mechanism • Geminal dihalides can be used

• Vicinal dihalides can also be used

• E2 requires anti-periplanar geometry

Page 11: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Preparation of Alkynes: Elimination Reactions of Dihalides

• For geminal dihalides (on C2), can produce either internal or terminal alkyne

Page 12: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Preparation of Alkynes• Often, excess equivalents of NaNH2 are used to shift the

equilibrium toward the elimination products

• NH21- is quite strong, so if a terminal alkyne is produced,

it will be deprotonated• That equilibrium will greatly favor products

Page 13: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Preparation of Alkynes• A proton source is needed to produce the alkyne

• Predict the products in the example below

Page 14: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Reduction of Alkynes• Like alkenes, alkynes can readily undergo hydrogenation• Two equivalents of H2 are

consumed for each alkynealkane conversion

• The cis alkene is produced as an intermediate due to mechanism.

• The addition of the first equivalent of H2 produces an alkene, which is more reactive than the alkyne so the alkene is not observed

Page 15: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Reduction w/ a Poisoned Catalyst• A deactivated or poisoned catalyst can be used to

selectively react with the alkyne

• Lindlar’s catalyst and P-2 (Ni2B complex) are common examples of a poisoned catalysts

Page 16: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Reduction w/ a Poisoned Catalyst• Is this a syn or anti addition?

Page 17: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Anhydrous ammonia (NH3) is a liquid below –33 ºC– Alkali metals dissolve in liquid ammonia and function as reducing

agents• Alkynes are reduced to trans alkenes with sodium or lithium in

liquid ammonia• The reaction involves a radical anion intermediate

Conversion of Alkynes to trans-Alkenes (Dissolving Metal Reductions)

Page 18: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Mechanism: Step 1

Dissolving Metal Reductions

• Note the single-barbed and double-barbed (fishhook) arrows.

Page 19: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Dissolving Metal Reductions• Mechanism: Step 1

• The radical anion adopts a trans configuration to reduce repulsion

Page 20: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Mechanism: step 2 and 3

• Draw the product for step 3 of the mechanism

Dissolving Metal Reductions

Page 21: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Mechanism: step 4

Dissolving Metal Reductions

Page 22: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Predict the product(s) for the following reaction

10.5 Dissolving Metal Reductions

Page 23: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Familiarize yourself with the reagents necessary to manipulate alkynes

• Practice with conceptual checkpoint 10.11

Summary of Reductions

Page 24: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Addition of HX to Alkynes Involves Markovnikov Products

Internal alkynes produce mixture of halogenated alkenes, then Markovnikov product

Terminal alkynes produce Markovnikov product

The associated mechanisms remain to be elucidated

Page 25: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Peroxides can be used in the hydrohalogenation of alkynes to promote anti-Markovnikov addition just like with alkenes

• The process proceeds through a free radical mechanism that we will discuss in detail in Chapter 11

Hydrohalogenation of Alkynes

Page 26: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Like alkenes, alkynes can also undergo acid catalyzed Markovnikov hydration

• The process is generally catalyzed with HgSO4 to compensate for the slow reaction rate that results from the formation of vinylic carbocation

• An internal alkyne will generate more than 1 product.

Hydration of Alkynes

Page 27: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Alkynes do not react with aqueous protic acids• Mercuric ion (as the sulfate) is a Lewis acid catalyst that promotes

addition of water with Markovnikov orientation• The immediate product is a vinylic alcohol, or enol, which

spontaneously transforms to a ketone or to an aldehyde in the event that acetylene is employed.

Hydration of Alkynes

Page 28: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• The enol/ketone tautomerization generally cannot be prevented and favors the ketone greatly

• Tautomers are constitutional isomers that rapidly interconvert.

Hydration of Alkynes

Page 29: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Addition of Hg(II) to alkyne gives a vinylic cation

• Water adds and loses a proton

• A proton from aqueous acid replaces Hg(II)

Mechanism of Mercury(II)-Catalyzed Hydration of Alkynes

Page 30: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Hydroboration-oxidation for alkynes proceeds through the same mechanism as for alkenes giving the anti-Markovnikov product

• It also produces an enol that will quickly tautomerize

• In this case, the tautomerization is catalyzed by the base (OH-) rather than by an acid

Hydroboration-Oxidation

Page 31: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• In general, we can conclude that a C=O double bond is more stable than a C=C double bond.

Hydroboration-Oxidation

Page 32: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• After the –BH2 and –H groups have been added across the C=C double bond, in some cases, an undesired second addition can take place

• To block out the second unit of BH3 from reacting with the intermediate, bulky borane reagents are often used

Hydroboration-Oxidation

B

H

H

RH

B

H

HH

R BH2

Undesired product

H

Page 33: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Some bulky borane reagents are shown below

Hydroboration-Oxidation

Page 34: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Predict products for the following reaction

• Draw the alkyne reactant and reagents that could be used to synthesize the following molecule

Hydroboration-Oxidation

O

Page 35: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Markovnikov hydration leads to a ketone• Anti-Markovnikov hydration leads to an aldehyde

Hydration Regioselectivity

Page 36: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Initial addition gives trans intermediate as the major product

• Product with excess reagent is tetrahalide• The mechanism for alkyne halogenation is

not fully elucidated

Alkyne Halogenation (Br or Cl)

Page 37: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Strong oxidizing reagents (O3 or KMnO4) cleave internal alkynes and terminal alkynes; alkyne carbons are fully oxidized

• Neither process is useful in modern synthesis

Oxidative Cleavage of Alkynes

Page 38: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Predict the product(s) for the following reaction

Alkyne Ozonolysis

O3

H2O

Page 39: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Terminal alkynes are weak Brønsted acids (alkenes and alkanes are much less acidic (pKa ~ 25. See Table 9.1 for comparisons))

• Reaction of strong anhydrous bases (e.g., sodium amide) with a terminal alkyne produces an acetylide ion

• The sp-hydbridization at carbon holds negative charge relatively close to the positive nucleus (Figure 9.5 in text)

• Acetylide anion is a good nucleophile

Alkyne Acidity: Formation of Acetylide Anions

Page 40: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Acetylide ions can react as nucleophiles as well as bases• Reaction with a primary alkyl halide produces a hydrocarbon

that contains carbons from both partners, providing a general route to larger alkynes

Alkylation of Acetylide Anions

Page 41: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Reactions only are efficient with 1º alkyl bromides and alkyl iodides

• Acetylide anions can behave as bases as well as nucelophiles• Reactions with 2º and 3º alkyl halides gives

dehydrohalogenation, converting alkyl halide to alkene

Limitations of Alkyation of Acetylide Ions

Page 42: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Acetylene can be used to perform a double alkylation

• This would involve two separate 2-step reactions• Complex target molecules can be made by building a

carbon skeleton and converting functional groups

Alkylation of Terminal Alkynes

Page 43: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Organic synthesis creates molecules by design• Synthesis can produce new molecules that are needed as

drugs or materials• Syntheses can be designed and tested to improve efficiency

and safety for making known molecules• Highly advanced synthesis is used to test ideas and methods,

answering challenges• Chemists who engage in synthesis may see some work as

elegant or beautiful when it uses novel ideas or combinations of steps – this is very subjective and not part of an introductory course

An Introduction to Organic Synthesis

Page 44: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• In order to propose a synthesis you must be familiar with reactions– What they begin with– What they lead to– How they are accomplished– What the limitations are

• A synthesis combines a series of proposed steps to go from a defined set of reactants to a specified product– Questions related to synthesis can include partial information

about a reaction of series that the student completes

Synthesis as a Tool for Learning Organic Chemistry

Page 45: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Compare the target and the starting material

• Consider reactions that efficiently produce the outcome. Look at the product and think of what can lead to it

• Read the practice problems in the text

Strategies for Synthesis

Page 46: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

• Give necessary reaction conditions for the multi-step conversions below

Synthetic Strategies

Br

OH

+

HO

Br+ En + En

Page 47: Alkynes. Alkynes are molecules that incorporate a C  C triple bond.

Graded HW #1: Synthesis Problems• Give 2 sets of reagents that could be used to synthesize

1-pentyne through elimination reactions.

• Determine necessary reagents to complete the synthesis below.

O


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