In organic chemistry, aldol reactions are acid- or base-catalyzed reactions of aldehydes or ketones.
Aldol addition or aldolization refers to the addition of an enolate or enolation as a nucleophile to a Carbonyl group moiety as an electrophile. This produces a β-hydroxyaldehyde or β-hydroxyketone. In an aldol condensation, water is subsequently eliminated and an α,β-unsaturated carbonyl is formed. The aldol cleavage or Retro-aldol reaction is the reverse reaction into the starting compounds.
The name aldehyde -alcohol reaction derives from the reaction product in the case of a reaction among aldehydes, a Aldol.
Aldol reactions are important reactions for carbon-carbon bond formation and a fundamental reaction principle in organic chemistry.
Despite the attractiveness of the aldol manifold, there are several problems that need to be addressed to render the process catalytic and effective. The first problem is a thermodynamic one: most aldol reactions are reversible. Furthermore, the equilibrium is also just barely on the side of the products in the case of simple aldehyde–ketone aldol reactions. If the conditions are particularly harsh (e.g.: NaOMe/MeOH/reflux), condensation may occur. However if an Aldol addition is desired, this can usually be avoided with mild reagents and low temperatures (e.g., LDA (a strong base), THF, −78 °C). Although aldol addition usually proceeds to near completion under irreversible conditions, the isolated aldol adducts are sensitive to base-induced retro-aldol cleavage to return starting materials. In contrast, retro-aldol condensations are rare, but possible. This is the basis of the catalytic strategy of class I aldolases in nature, as well as numerous small-molecule amine catalysts.
After which it may undergo dehydration to give a unsaturated carbonyl compound, the aldol condensation product. The scheme shows a simple mechanism for the base-catalyzed aldol reaction of an aldehyde with itself.
Base-catalyzed aldol reaction Base-catalyzed dehydration Although only a catalytic amount of base is required in some cases, the more usual procedure is to use a stoichiometric amount of a strong base such as LDA or NaHMDS. In this case, enolate formation is irreversible, and the aldol product is not formed until the metal alkoxide of the aldol product is protonated in a separate workup step.
This under the right conditions can then dehydrate to give the unsaturated carbonyl compound, the aldol condensation product.
The mechanism of the intramolecular aldol reaction involves formation of a key enolate intermediate followed by an intramolecular nucleophilic addition process.
First, hydroxide abstracts the α-hydrogen on a terminal carbon to form the enolate. Next, a nucleophilic attack of the enolate on the other keto group forms a new carbon-carbon bond (red) between carbons 2 and 6. This forms the Aldol addition product.
Then, usually under heating conditions, the elimination of water molecule yields the cyclized α,β-unsaturated ketone, the aldol condensation product. Intramolecular aldol reactions have been widely used in total syntheses of various natural products, especially alkaloids and steroids. An example is the application of an intramolecular aldol reaction in the ring closure step for total synthesis of (+)-Wortmannin by Shigehisa, et al.Shigehisa, H.; Mizutani, T.; Tosaki, S. Y.; Ohshima, T.; Shibasaki, M, Tetrahedron 2005, 61, 5057-5065. (Figure 2).
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