Nucleophilic Addition Reactions
The characteristic reaction of the Carbonyl Group ($>C=O$).
Unlike alkenes which undergo electrophilic addition, aldehydes and ketones undergo nucleophilic addition. This is because the carbonyl carbon is electron-deficient (electrophilic) due to the polarity of the C-O bond.
1. Mechanism of Nucleophilic Addition
Step-by-Step
- Attack of Nucleophile: The nucleophile ($Nu^-$) attacks the electrophilic carbon perpendicular to the plane of the $sp^2$ hybridized orbitals.
- Hybridization Change: The carbon changes from planar $sp^2$ to tetrahedral $sp^3$. The $\pi$-electrons shift to Oxygen.
- Protonation: The resulting alkoxide intermediate captures a proton from the medium to form the addition product.
2. Reactivity: Aldehydes vs Ketones
Aldehydes > Ketones
Aldehydes are generally more reactive than ketones in nucleophilic addition reactions due to two main reasons:
Ketones have two bulky alkyl groups hindering the approach of the nucleophile. Aldehydes have only one alkyl group and one small hydrogen.
Alkyl groups are electron-releasing (+I). Two alkyl groups in ketones reduce the positive charge on Carbon more effectively than one group in aldehydes, making the carbon less electrophilic.
3. Important Addition Reactions
A. Addition of HCN
Reaction with Hydrogen Cyanide yields Cyanohydrins. This reaction is catalyzed by a base (to generate $CN^-$).
B. Addition of Sodium Hydrogen Sulphite
Reaction with $NaHSO_3$ gives a crystalline bisulphite addition compound. This is used for the separation and purification of aldehydes/ketones.
C. Addition of Grignard Reagents
Forms Alcohols (discussed in Alcohol preparation).
D. Addition of Alcohols
Aldehydes react with 1 eq. of alcohol to form Hemiacetal (unstable) and with 2 eq. to form Acetal (stable) in the presence of dry HCl.
4. Addition of Ammonia Derivatives
Addition-Elimination
Reaction with compounds of the type $H_2N-Z$ occurs in weakly acidic medium (optimum pH 3.5). Water is eliminated.
| Reagent ($H_2N-Z$) | Product Name | Structure ($>C=N-Z$) |
|---|---|---|
| Ammonia ($NH_3$) | Imine | $>C=NH$ |
| Amine ($R-NH_2$) | Schiff's Base | $>C=N-R$ |
| Hydroxylamine ($NH_2OH$) | Oxime | $>C=N-OH$ |
| Hydrazine ($NH_2NH_2$) | Hydrazone | $>C=N-NH_2$ |
| Phenylhydrazine | Phenylhydrazone | $>C=N-NHPh$ |
| 2,4-DNP | 2,4-DNP Hydrazone | Orange Precipitate |
Knowledge Check
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