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- In this video, I want to introduce you to a mechanism
- called the aldol reaction.
- And it's easily one of the most important mechanisms and
- reactions in all of organic chemistry because it's a
- powerful way to actually create carbon-carbon bonds.
- And it'll actually be a little bit of a review of what we saw
- with enol and the enolate ions and the keto-enol tautomerism.
- I have trouble saying that.
- Anyway, let's start with a couple of aldehydes.
- And just for convenience I'll make them identical.
- So let's say that this is one of aldehydes, it just has a
- carbon chain there.
- That's what the r is, it could be of any length.
- Who knows what's there.
- And then I have another carbon here.
- And then this is bound to the carbonyl group and we're going
- to make it an aldehyde, although you could do this
- reaction with a ketone as well.
- And just to make things clear, this carbon right here-- which
- is going to be involved in a lot of the business here-- let
- me draw it's hydrogens.
- Normally we don't have to draw its hydrogens.
- And just as a bit of review, the carbon that is next to the
- carbonyl carbon is called an alpha carbon.
- If this was a ketone, this would have also been an alpha
- carbon if this was a carbon.
- And we're going to see in this reaction, besides just
- exploring the reaction, is that these hydrogens are
- actually much more acidic then traditional hydrogens attached
- to carbons on the rest of the chain.
- And it comes from the fact that this proton can be given
- to something else, the electron can go to that
- carbon, and then it'll be resonance stabilized.
- And we're going to see that in a second.
- Now I said I would draw two molecules of that, because we
- need two molecules.
- We're actually going to be, to some degree,
- joining the two molecules.
- So let me draw another aldehyde right over here.
- And I'm going to draw it symmetric to this, because
- it'll make it, I think, a little bit easier to visualize
- the two molecules.
- Actually, let me just draw it the same way.
- But I'll draw it in a different color.
- So you have the r group and then you have the
- oxygen right there.
- And I won't draw all of the hydrogens on this guy, but
- this and this are the exact same molecule.
- It's just the hydrogens are implicit here.
- Now, the aldol reaction I'll show you will be in a basic
- environment.
- So you could imagine that it'll be catalyzed by a base.
- And so, imagine we have some hydroxide laying around.
- Some of the hydroxide anion.
- Let me do that in a different color.
- So let's say we have some hydroxide anion floating
- around-- negative charge, just like that.
- I just told you that these hydrogens are much more acidic
- then hydrogens anywhere else on a carbon chain-- these
- alpha hydrogens.
- So you could imagine a situation where an electron
- from the hydroxide is given to one of these hydrogen protons
- and then the electron that was associated with that hydrogen
- is now given back to this alpha carbon.
- And so if that were to happen, the next step in our reaction
- would look like this.
- And I'll draw it in equilibrium.
- Actually, let me draw it this way.
- So the products of that step would be in equilibrium, with,
- you have your carbon chain or the rest of your molecule
- right there.
- And that's just to show that it could be anything.
- It's attached here to the alpha carbon, which is now
- going to be negative-- I'll show that in a second-- which
- is attached to the carbonyl group, which is
- attached to a hydrogen.
- And actually, I'll stop drawing that
- hydrogen for now, too.
- Just, we know it's there.
- But I'll keep drawing this hydrogen right over here.
- The other hydrogen was taken away and this alpha carbon now
- has a negative charge because it got the
- electron from that proton.
- And of course, we have the hydroxide.
- It grabbed this hydrogen and it is now water.
- Now the reason why this was acidic to begin with is
- because this is resonance stabilized.
- And I'll show you that it's resonance
- stabilized right now.
- This alpha carbon right here can give its electron to the
- carbonyl carbon.
- And if the carbonyl carbon gets an electron, it can give
- an electron to this oxygen up here.
- It'll break the double bond.
- So this configuration is resonance
- stabilized with this.
- So I could draw it like this.
- You have your r and then you have a single
- bond to this oxygen.
- It now gained an electron.
- It is now negative.
- And you now have a double bond, just like that.
- And I could draw this hydrogen if I like, or I don't have to.
- It's implicitly over there now.
- And you might be familiar with this.
- This is the Enolate anion.
- This right here is the enolate ion.
- If we had a hydrogen right here, it would be enol, and we
- would say hey, this is the keto form,
- this is the enol form.
- We've seen this before.
- Now, what's interesting about the enolate ion is it can act
- as a nucleophile.
- It can do a nucleophilic attack on the other aldehyde's
- carbonyl group.
- But it does it in kind of a non-conventional way.
- And I'll show you how it does it right now.
- So it does the attack like this.
- So let me draw this guy over here.
- So you have the carbonyl group and then you have its alpha
- carbon and then you have an r group right over there.
- There's actually a hydrogen right over here, as well.
- I just flipped it over.
- This and this are the same molecule.
- And let me make it clear-- these two guys right here are
- residence forms. And, once again, this is the reason why
- it's easier to take this hydrogen than other hydrogens
- on a traditional carbon chain.
- Easier to take an alpha hydrogen to a carbonyl group
- because you have this resonance structure.
- But this enolate ion, especially this configuration
- of it, you can imagine it doing something like this.
- You can imagine this oxygen giving back the electron to
- the carbonyl carbon-- to this carbon right here.
- And when that happens, then this guy is going to be giving
- up an electron.
- And that electron that he gives up-- let me do it in a
- new color-- this electron that he gives up could go and do a
- nucleophilic attack on this carbonyl group.
- And so if that carbonyl carbon gets-- let me do this in a new
- color-- if this carbonyl carbon gets an electron, then
- it could give away an electron to that oxygen right up there.
- So the next step after this, we would have
- something like this.
- And once again, I'll show it as happening in equilibrium.
- So from here we go right over there, and what we have is a
- situation-- let me draw this guy on the left first. So we
- have a double bond to this oxygen now.
- Actually, let me draw the second.
- So this is this oxygen.
- We now have a double bond.
- And let me do it in this same purple color right over here.
- And then we have the rest of what was an aldehyde.
- Where you have-- let me do it in that same color-- and then
- you have your r group right over there.
- But now this electron gets in an attack
- on this other aldehyde.
- So this guy right here, this alpha carbon is that same
- alpha carbon we've been dealing with, is now bonded to
- this carbonyl carbon.
- So it is now bound to this carbonyl
- carbon right over here.
- And so it will look like this.
- Let me draw it with the right colors.
- Get the orange out.
- So that carbonyl carbon, it now has a single
- bond to this oxygen.
- This electron was taken back by it.
- So this oxygen now has a negative charge.
- And it is bound to its alpha carbon.
- And then that is bonded to another group, probably a
- carbon chain or something that contains a carbon chain or
- another function or group.
- Whatever you want to call it.
- And then the final step.
- This anion can get rid of its negative charge by essentially
- grabbing a hydrogen maybe from this water
- that was formed before.
- Obviously, not going to be the same molecule, but it could
- grab it from this in a previous step.
- This water molecule that was formed in a previous step.
- And of course, this is all in a basic environment.
- So it can give an electron to this hydrogen, and then the
- hydrogen proton would lose an electron to the hydroxide and
- the hydroxide will become negative again.
- And so what will be the final product?
- The final product will be-- and I'm just going to try my
- best to redraw this thing right over here.
- You have this part of the molecule, so you have this
- carbonyl group right over here.
- It is attached to this radical group right over there.
- So that is this part.
- And I can even do the same colors.
- This bond right over here is this bond right over here.
- And then this carbon is attached to a carbon that's
- attached to a hydroxyl group now.
- So it'll look like this.
- And let me draw it.
- So this oxygen is now this oxygen, and it just captured
- this hydrogen.
- So it is now a hydroxyl group.
- It's now an -OH group.
- And then, finally, this guy is bound to what
- was an alpha carbon.
- It's not anymore.
- What was an alpha carbon, which is then bound to a
- radical group.
- And if we want, we can remember that there was
- always, from the get-go, there was always a
- hydrogen over here.
- So why is this called the aldol reaction
- and why does it matter?
- Well, it's called the aldol reaction because what we
- formed is both an aldehyde-- notice this is an aldehyde--
- and it's an alcohol.
- So that's where the word aldol comes from.
- But the more important thing about this-- and I don't want
- to mislead you-- could have also done this with a ketone
- You could have had a methyl group or a ethyl group.
- You could have had a big carbon chain here.
- It still would've worked.
- So the aldol reaction doesn't only form things that are
- aldehydes and alcohols.
- It could have formed something that's both a
- ketone and an alcohol.
- But that's why it's called the aldol reaction.
- But the more important thing about the aldol reaction is,
- one, it shows you how the enolate ion can be a
- nucleophile.
- It shows you why the alpha hydrogens are more acidic than
- hydrogens on other parts of carbon chains.
- But the most useful aspect of it is it's a useful way to
- actually join two carbon chains together.
- Notice, we were able to join this alpha carbon right here
- to this carbonyl carbon over here to form this aldol.
- Or sometimes this will be called-- because this is still
- an alpha carbon right here, this is an alpha carbon, this
- is a beta carbon-- and so sometimes this will be
- referred to as a beta hydroxy.
- And we've probably used things from the pharmacy that has
- this word in it.
- This is also called a beta hydroxy.
- This is alpha, this is beta.
- It has a hydroxyl group on the beta carbon.
- Beta hydroxy aldehyde.
- Anyway, hopefully you found that entertaining.