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Hunsdiecker reaction

Named reaction for synthesis of organic halides

Hunsdiecker reaction

Named reaction for synthesis of organic halides

Cläre Hunsdiecker Alexander Borodin The Hunsdiecker reaction (also called the Borodin reaction or the Hunsdiecker–Borodin reaction) is a name reaction in organic chemistry whereby silver salts of carboxylic acids react with a halogen to produce an organic halide. It is an example of both a decarboxylation and a halogenation reaction as the product has one fewer carbon atoms than the starting material (lost as carbon dioxide) and a halogen atom is introduced its place. A catalytic approach has been developed.

:[[Image:Hunsdiecker Reaction Scheme.png|400px|The Hunsdiecker reaction|alt=Reaction scheme for the Hunsdiecker reaction. Reactant is silver carboxylate with general group R. Reagent is molecular bromine. Solvent is carbon tetrachloride. Product is general group R from carboxylate now mono-brominated.]]

History

The reaction is named after Cläre Hunsdiecker and her husband Heinz Hunsdiecker, whose work in the 1930s developed it into a general method.

The reaction was first demonstrated by Alexander Borodin in 1861 in his reports of the preparation of methyl bromide () from silver acetate ().

Three decades later, Angelo Simonini, working as a student of Adolf Lieben at the University of Vienna, investigated the reactions of silver carboxylates with iodine. He found that the products formed are determined by the stoichiometry within the reaction mixture. Using a carboxylate-to-iodine ratio of 1:1 leads to an alkyl iodide product, in line with Borodin's findings and the modern understanding of the Hunsdiecker reaction. However, a 2:1 ratio favours the formation of an ester product that arises from decarboxylation of one carboxylate and coupling the resulting alkyl chain with the other.

:[[Image:Simonini Reaction Scheme.png|300px|The Simonini reaction]]

Using a 3:2 ratio of reactants leads to the formation of a 1:1 mixture of both products. These processes are sometimes known as the Simonini reaction rather than as modifications of the Hunsdiecker reaction.

:3 + 2 → + + 2 + 3

Reaction mechanism

In terms of reaction mechanism, the Hunsdiecker reaction is believed to involve organic radical intermediates. The silver salt 1 reacts with bromine to form the acyl hypohalite intermediate 2. Formation of the diradical pair 3 allows for radical decarboxylation to form the diradical pair 4, which recombines to form the organic halide 5. The trend in the yield of the resulting halide is primary secondary tertiary.

:[[File:Hunsdiecker Reaction Mechanism.png|Radicalic mechanism of Hunsdiecker reaction|650px]]

Variations

The reaction cannot be performed in protic solvents, as these induce decomposition of the intermediate acetyl hypohalite.

Other counterions than silver typically have slow reaction rates. The relativistic metals mercury, thallium, and lead are preferred: inert counterions, such as the alkali metals, have only rarely led to reported success. The Kochi reaction is a variation on the Hunsdiecker reaction developed by Jay Kochi that uses lead(IV) acetate and lithium chloride (lithium bromide can also be used) to effect the halogenation and decarboxylation.

The Kochi reaction

In the presence of multiple bonds, the intermediate acetyl hypohalite prefers to add to the bond, producing an α-haloester. Steric considerations suppress this tendency in α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acids, which instead polymerize (see below).

Mercuric oxide and bromine convert 3-chlorocyclobutanecarboxylic acid to 1-bromo-3-chlorocyclobutane. This is known as Cristol-Firth modification. The reaction has been applied to the preparation of ω-bromo esters with chain lengths between five and seventeen carbon atoms, with the preparation of methyl 5-bromovalerate published in Organic Syntheses as an exemplar.

Metal-free photo-Hunsdiecker reactions are also possible.

Reaction with α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acids

Synthesis of β-arylvinyl halide by microwave-induced Hunsdiecker reaction.

For unsaturated compounds, the radical conditions associated with the Hunsdiecker reaction can also induce polymerization instead of decarboxylation. Kuang et al have found that an alternate radical halogenating agent, N-halosuccinimide, combined with a lithium acetate catalyst, gives a higher yield of β-halostyrenes. The reaction also improves in the presence of microwave irradiation, which preferentially synthesizes (E)-β-arylvinyl halides.

For a green metal-free reaction, tetrabutylammonium trifluoroacetate serves as an alternative catalyst. However, it only exhibits comparable yields to the original lithium acetate when performed with micellular surfactants.

References

References

  1. "Method of manufacturing organic chlorine and bromine derivatives".
  2. (1942). "Über den Abbau der Salze aliphatischer Säuren durch Brom". [[Chemische Berichte]].
  3. (1972). "The chemistry of acyl halides". John Wright & Sons / Interscience.
  4. (1965). "Bicyclo[1.1.0]butane". [[Tetrahedron (journal).
  5. Kulbitski, Kseniya. (2011). "Metal‐Free Efficient, General and Facile Iododecarboxylation Method with Biodegradable Co‐Products". Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis.
  6. (1997-01-01). "The First Example of a Catalytic Hunsdiecker Reaction: Synthesis of β-Halostyrenes". The Journal of Organic Chemistry.
  7. (2000). "Stereoselective Synthesis of (E)-β-Arylvinyl Halides by Microwave-Induced Hunsdiecker Reaction". Synlett.
  8. (1998-02-12). "Is metal necessary in the Hunsdiecker-Borodin reaction?". Tetrahedron Letters.
  9. (2002-11-01). "Catalytic Hunsdiecker Reaction of α,β-Unsaturated Carboxylic Acids: How Efficient Is the Catalyst?". The Journal of Organic Chemistry.
  10. (2007-04-01). "Micellar Mediated Halodecarboxylation of α,β-Unsaturated Aliphatic and Aromatic Carboxylic Acids—A Novel Green Hunsdiecker–Borodin Reaction". Journal of Dispersion Science and Technology.
  11. Borodin, A.. (1861). "Ueber Bromvaleriansäure und Brombuttersäure". [[Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie]].
  12. Borodin, A.. (1861). "Ueber de Monobrombaldriansäure und Monobrombuttersäure". [[Zeitschrift für Chemie und Pharmacie]].
  13. (1963). "Bromocyclopropane".
  14. (2012). "Silver-Catalyzed Decarboxylative Chlorination of Aliphatic Carboxylic Acids". [[Journal of the American Chemical Society]].
  15. Li, J. J.. (2014-01-30). "Name Reactions: A Collection of Detailed Mechanisms and Synthetic Applications". [[Springer Science & Business Media]].
  16. (1956). "The Degradation of Carboxylic Acid Salts by Means of Halogen – the Hunsdiecker Reaction". [[Chem. Rev.]].
  17. Kochi, J. K.. (1965). "A New Method for Halodecarboxylation of Acids Using Lead(IV) Acetate". [[Journal of the American Chemical Society]].
  18. (1971). "Mercury(II) oxide-modified Hunsdiecker reaction: 1-Bromo-3-chlorocyclobutane".
  19. (1971). "Bicyclo[1.1.0]butane".
  20. (1946). "Methyl 5-bromovalerate (Valeric acid, δ-bromo-, methyl ester)".
  21. Simonini, A.. (1892). "Über den Abbau der fetten Säuren zu kohlenstoffärmeren Alkoholen". Monatshefte für Chemie und verwandte Teile anderer Wissenschaften.
  22. Simonini, A.. (1893). "Über den Abbau der fetten Säuren zu kohlenstoffärmeren Alkoholen". Monatshefte für Chemie und verwandte Teile anderer Wissenschaften.
  23. Wilson, C. V.. (1957). "The Reaction of Halogens with Silver Salts of Carboxylic Acids". [[Org. React.]].
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