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Alkyne

In organic chemistry, an alkyne is an unsaturated hydrocarbon containing at least one carbon—carbon triple bond.[1] The simplest acyclic alkynes with only one triple bond and no other functional groups form a homologous series with the general chemical formula CnH2n−2. Alkynes are traditionally known as acetylenes, although the name acetylene also refers specifically to C2H2, known formally as ethyne using IUPAC nomenclature. Like other hydrocarbons, alkynes are generally hydrophobic.[2]

A 3D model of ethyne (acetylene), the simplest alkyne

Structure and bonding

In acetylene, the H–C≡C bond angles are 180°. By virtue of this bond angle, alkynes are rod-like. Correspondingly, cyclic alkynes are rare. Benzyne cannot be isolated. The C≡C bond distance of 118 picometers (for C2H2) is much shorter than the C=C distance in alkenes (132 pm, for C2H4) or the C–C bond in alkanes (153 pm).[3]

 
Illustrative alkynes: a, acetylene, b, two depictions of propyne, c, 1-butyne, d, 2-butyne, e, the naturally occurring 1-phenylhepta-1,3,5-triyne, and f, the strained cycloheptyne. Triple bonds are highlighted blue.

The triple bond is very strong with a bond strength of 839 kJ/mol. The sigma bond contributes 369 kJ/mol, the first pi bond contributes 268 kJ/mol and the second pi-bond of 202 kJ/mol bond strength. Bonding usually discussed in the context of molecular orbital theory, which recognizes the triple bond as arising from overlap of s and p orbitals. In the language of valence bond theory, the carbon atoms in an alkyne bond are sp hybridized: they each have two unhybridized p orbitals and two sp hybrid orbitals. Overlap of an sp orbital from each atom forms one sp–sp sigma bond. Each p orbital on one atom overlaps one on the other atom, forming two pi bonds, giving a total of three bonds. The remaining sp orbital on each atom can form a sigma bond to another atom, for example to hydrogen atoms in the parent acetylene. The two sp orbitals project on opposite sides of the carbon atom.

Terminal and internal alkynes

Internal alkynes feature carbon substituents on each acetylenic carbon. Symmetrical examples include diphenylacetylene and 3-hexyne.

Terminal alkynes have the formula RC2H. An example is methylacetylene (propyne using IUPAC nomenclature). Terminal alkynes, like acetylene itself, are mildly acidic, with pKa values of around 25. They are far more acidic than alkenes and alkanes, which have pKa values of around 40 and 50, respectively. The acidic hydrogen on terminal alkynes can be replaced by a variety of groups resulting in halo-, silyl-, and alkoxoalkynes. The carbanions generated by deprotonation of terminal alkynes are called acetylides.[4]

Naming alkynes

In systematic chemical nomenclature, alkynes are named with the Greek prefix system without any additional letters. Examples include ethyne or octyne. In parent chains with four or more carbons, it is necessary to say where the triple bond is located. For octyne, one can either write 3-octyne or oct-3-yne when the bond starts at the third carbon. The lowest number possible is given to the triple bond. When no superior functional groups are present, the parent chain must include the triple bond even if it is not the longest possible carbon chain in the molecule. Ethyne is commonly called by its trivial name acetylene.

In chemistry, the suffix -yne is used to denote the presence of a triple bond. In organic chemistry, the suffix often follows IUPAC nomenclature. However, inorganic compounds featuring unsaturation in the form of triple bonds may be denoted by substitutive nomenclature with the same methods used with alkynes (i.e. the name of the corresponding saturated compound is modified by replacing the "-ane" ending with "-yne"). "-diyne" is used when there are two triple bonds, and so on. The position of unsaturation is indicated by a numerical locant immediately preceding the "-yne" suffix, or 'locants' in the case of multiple triple bonds. Locants are chosen so that the numbers are low as possible. "-yne" is also used as a suffix to name substituent groups that are triply bound to the parent compound.

Sometimes a number between hyphens is inserted before it to state which atoms the triple bond is between. This suffix arose as a collapsed form of the end of the word "acetylene". The final "-e" disappears if it is followed by another suffix that starts with a vowel.[5]

Structural isomerism

Alkynes having four or more carbon atoms can form different structural isomers by having the triple bond in different positions or having some of the carbon atoms be substituents rather than part of the parent chain. Other non-alkyne structural isomers are also possible.

Synthesis

Cracking

Commercially, the dominant alkyne is acetylene itself, which is used as a fuel and a precursor to other compounds, e.g., acrylates. Hundreds of millions of kilograms are produced annually by partial oxidation of natural gas:[6]

 

Propyne, also industrially useful, is also prepared by thermal cracking of hydrocarbons.

Dehydrohalogenation and related reactions

Alkynes are prepared from 1,2- and 1,1-alkyl dihalides by double dehydrohalogenation. The reaction provides a means to generate alkynes from alkenes, which are first halogenated and then dehydrohalogenated. For example, phenylacetylene can be generated from styrene by bromination followed by treatment of the resulting of styrene dibromide with sodium amide in ammonia:[7][8]

 

Via the Fritsch–Buttenberg–Wiechell rearrangement, alkynes are prepared from vinyl bromides. Alkynes can be prepared from aldehydes using the Corey–Fuchs reaction and from aldehydes or ketones by the Seyferth–Gilbert homologation.

Vinyl chlorides are susceptible to dehydrochlorination. Vinyl chlorides are available from aldehydes using the reagent (chloromethylene)triphenylphosphorane.

Reactions, including applications

Featuring a reactive functional group, alkynes participate in many organic reactions. Such use was pioneered by Ralph Raphael, who in 1955 wrote the first book describing their versatility as intermediates in synthesis.[9]

Hydrogenation

Being more unsaturated than alkenes, alkynes characteristically undergo reactions that show that they are "doubly unsaturated". Alkynes are capable of adding two equivalents of H2, whereas an alkene adds only one equivalent.[10] Depending on catalysts and conditions, alkynes add one or two equivalents of hydrogen. Partial hydrogenation, stopping after the addition of only one equivalent to give the alkene, is usually more desirable since alkanes are less useful:

 

The largest scale application of this technology is the conversion of acetylene to ethylene in refineries (the steam cracking of alkanes yields a few percent acetylene, which is selectively hydrogenated in the presence of a palladium/silver catalyst). For more complex alkynes, the Lindlar catalyst is widely recommended to avoid formation of the alkane, for example in the conversion of phenylacetylene to styrene.[11] Similarly, halogenation of alkynes gives the alkene dihalides or alkyl tetrahalides:

 
 

The addition of one equivalent of H2 to internal alkynes gives cis-alkenes.

Addition of halogens and related reagents

Alkynes characteristically are capable of adding two equivalents of halogens and hydrogen halides.

 

The addition of nonpolar E−H bonds across C≡C is general for silanes, boranes, and related hydrides. The hydroboration of alkynes gives vinylic boranes which oxidize to the corresponding aldehyde or ketone. In the thiol-yne reaction the substrate is a thiol.

Addition of hydrogen halides has long been of interest. In the presence of mercuric chloride as a catalyst, acetylene and hydrogen chloride react to give vinyl chloride. While this method has been abandoned in the West, it remains the main production method in China.[12]

Hydration

The hydration reaction of acetylene gives acetaldehyde. The reaction proceeds by formation of vinyl alcohol, which undergoes tautomerizes to form the aldehyde. This reaction was once a major industrial process but it has been displaced by the Wacker process. This reaction occurs in nature, the catalyst being acetylene hydratase.

The hydration of phenylacetylene gives acetophenone,[13] and the (Ph3P)AuCH3- catalyzed hydration of 1,8-nonadiyne to 2,8-nonanedione:[14]

 
 

Tautomerism

Terminal alkyl alkynes exhibit tautomerism. Propyne exists in equilibrium with propadiene:

 

Cycloadditions and oxidation

Alkynes undergo diverse cycloaddition reactions. The Diels–Alder reaction with 1,3-dienes give 1,4-cyclohexadienes. This general reaction has been extensively developed. Electrophilic alkynes are especially effective dienophiles. The "cycloadduct" derived from the addition of alkynes to 2-pyrone eliminates carbon dioxide to give the aromatic compound. Other specialized cycloadditions include multicomponent reactions such as alkyne trimerisation to give aromatic compounds and the [2+2+1]-cycloaddition of an alkyne, alkene and carbon monoxide in the Pauson–Khand reaction. Non-carbon reagents also undergo cyclization, e.g. Azide alkyne Huisgen cycloaddition to give triazoles. Cycloaddition processes involving alkynes are often catalyzed by metals, e.g. enyne metathesis and alkyne metathesis, which allows the scrambling of carbyne (RC) centers:

 

Oxidative cleavage of alkynes proceeds via cycloaddition to metal oxides. Most famously, potassium permanganate converts alkynes to a pair of carboxylic acids.

Reactions specific for terminal alkynes

Terminal alkynes are readily converted to many derivatives, e.g. by coupling reactions and condensations. Via the condensation with formaldehyde and acetylene is produced butynediol:[6][15]

 

In the Sonogashira reaction, terminal alkynes are coupled with aryl or vinyl halides:

 

This reactivity exploits the fact that terminal alkynes are weak acids, whose typical pKa values around 25 place them between that of ammonia (35) and ethanol (16):

 

where MX = NaNH2, LiBu, or RMgX.

The reactions of alkynes with certain metal cations, e.g. Ag+ and Cu+ also gives acetylides. Thus, few drops of diamminesilver(I) hydroxide (Ag(NH3)2OH) reacts with terminal alkynes signaled by formation of a white precipitate of the silver acetylide. This reactivity is the basis of alkyne coupling reactions, including the Cadiot–Chodkiewicz coupling, Glaser coupling, and the Eglinton coupling:[16]

 

In the Favorskii reaction and in alkynylations in general, terminal alkynes add to carbonyl compounds to give the hydroxyalkyne.

Metal complexes

Alkynes form complexes with transition metals. Such complexes occur also in metal catalyzed reactions of alkynes such as alkyne trimerization. Terminal alkynes, including acetylene itself, react with water to give aldehydes. The transformation typically requires metal catalysts to give this anti-Markovnikov addition result.[17]

Alkynes in nature and medicine

According to Ferdinand Bohlmann, the first naturally occurring acetylenic compound, dehydromatricaria ester, was isolated from an Artemisia species in 1826. In the nearly two centuries that have followed, well over a thousand naturally occurring acetylenes have been discovered and reported. Polyynes, a subset of this class of natural products, have been isolated from a wide variety of plant species, cultures of higher fungi, bacteria, marine sponges, and corals.[18] Some acids like tariric acid contain an alkyne group. Diynes and triynes, species with the linkage RC≡C–C≡CR′ and RC≡C–C≡C–C≡CR′ respectively, occur in certain plants (Ichthyothere, Chrysanthemum, Cicuta, Oenanthe and other members of the Asteraceae and Apiaceae families). Some examples are cicutoxin, oenanthotoxin, and falcarinol . These compounds are highly bioactive, e.g. as nematocides.[19] 1-Phenylhepta-1,3,5-triyne is illustrative of a naturally occurring triyne.

Alkynes occur in some pharmaceuticals, including the contraceptive noretynodrel. A carbon–carbon triple bond is also present in marketed drugs such as the antiretroviral Efavirenz and the antifungal Terbinafine. Molecules called ene-diynes feature a ring containing an alkene ("ene") between two alkyne groups ("diyne"). These compounds, e.g. calicheamicin, are some of the most aggressive antitumor drugs known, so much so that the ene-diyne subunit is sometimes referred to as a "warhead". Ene-diynes undergo rearrangement via the Bergman cyclization, generating highly reactive radical intermediates that attack DNA within the tumor.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Alkyne. Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ Saul Patai, ed. (1978). The Carbon–Carbon Triple Bond. Vol. 1. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470771563.
  3. ^ Smith, Michael B.; March, Jerry (2006). March's Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure. p. 24. doi:10.1002/0470084960. ISBN 9780470084960.
  4. ^ Bloch, Daniel R. (2012). Organic Chemistry Demystified (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-07-176797-2.
  5. ^ The Commission on the Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (1971) [1958 (A: Hydrocarbons, and B: Fundamental Heterocyclic Systems), 1965 (C: Characteristic Groups)]. Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (3rd ed.). London: Butterworths. ISBN 0-408-70144-7.
  6. ^ a b Gräfje, Heinz; Körnig, Wolfgang; Weitz, Hans-Martin; Reiß, Wolfgang; Steffan, Guido; Diehl, Herbert; Bosche, Horst; Schneider, Kurt; Kieczka (2000). "Butanediols, Butenediol, and Butynediol". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a04_455.
  7. ^ Kenneth N. Campbell, Barbara K. Campbell (1950). "Phenylacetylene". Organic Syntheses. 30: 72. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.030.0072.
  8. ^ A. Le Coq and A. Gorgues (1979). "Alkyness via Phase Transfer-Catalyzed Dehydrohalogenatiion: Propiolaldehyde Diethyl Acetal". Organic Syntheses. 59: 10. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.059.0010.
  9. ^ Raphael, Ralph Alexander (1955). Acetylenic compounds in organic synthesis. London: Butterworths Scientific Publications. OCLC 3134811.
  10. ^ Rosser & Williams (1977). Modern Organic Chemistry for A-level. Great Britain: Collins. p. 82. ISBN 0003277402.
  11. ^ H. Lindlar; R. Dubuis (1973). "Palladium catalyst for partial reduction of acetylenes". Organic Syntheses.; Collective Volume, vol. 5, p. 880.
  12. ^ Dreher, Eberhard-Ludwig; Torkelson, Theodore R.; Beutel, Klaus K. (2011). "Chlorethanes and Chloroethylenes". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.o06_o01.
  13. ^ Fukuda, Y.; Utimoto, K. (1991). "Effective transformation of unactivated alkynes into ketones or acetals with a gold(III) catalyst". J. Org. Chem. 56 (11): 3729. doi:10.1021/jo00011a058..
  14. ^ Mizushima, E.; Cui, D.-M.; Nath, D. C. D.; Hayashi, T.; Tanaka, M. (2005). "Au(I)-Catalyzed hydratation of alkynes: 2,8-nonanedione". Organic Syntheses. 83: 55.
  15. ^ Peter Pässler; Werner Hefner; Klaus Buckl; Helmut Meinass; Andreas Meiswinkel; Hans-Jürgen Wernicke; Günter Ebersberg; Richard Müller; Jürgen Bässler (2008). "Acetylene". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a01_097.pub3.
  16. ^ K. Stöckel and F. Sondheimer (1974). "[18]Annulene". Organic Syntheses. 54: 1. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.054.0001.
  17. ^ Hintermann, Lukas; Labonne, Aurélie (2007). "Catalytic Hydration of Alkynes and Its Application in Synthesis". Synthesis. 2007 (8): 1121–1150. doi:10.1055/s-2007-966002. S2CID 95666091.
  18. ^ Annabelle L. K. Shi Shun; Rik R. Tykwinski (2006). "Synthesis of Naturally Occurring Polyynes". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 45 (7): 1034–1057. doi:10.1002/anie.200502071. PMID 16447152.
  19. ^ Lam, Jørgen (1988). Chemistry and biology of naturally-occurring acetylenes and related compounds (NOARC): proceedings of a Conference on the Chemistry and Biology of Naturally-Occurring Acetylenes and Related Compounds (NOARC). Amsterdam: Elsevier. ISBN 0-444-87115-2.
  20. ^ S. Walker; R. Landovitz; W.D. Ding; G.A. Ellestad; D. Kahne (1992). "Cleavage behavior of calicheamicin gamma 1 and calicheamicin T". Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 89 (10): 4608–12. Bibcode:1992PNAS...89.4608W. doi:10.1073/pnas.89.10.4608. PMC 49132. PMID 1584797.

alkyne, confused, with, alkane, alkene, displaystyle, acetylene, displaystyle, overset, displaystyle, atop, underset, atop, displaystyle, propyne, displaystyle, overset, displaystyle, atop, underset, atop, displaystyle, overset, displaystyle, atop, underset, a. Not to be confused with alkane or alkene H C C H displaystyle ce H C C ce H Acetylene H C C C H H H displaystyle ce H C C ce overset displaystyle H atop underset atop displaystyle H C ce H Propyne H C C C H H C H H H displaystyle ce H C C ce overset displaystyle H atop underset atop displaystyle H C ce overset displaystyle H atop underset atop displaystyle H C ce H 1 Butyne In organic chemistry an alkyne is an unsaturated hydrocarbon containing at least one carbon carbon triple bond 1 The simplest acyclic alkynes with only one triple bond and no other functional groups form a homologous series with the general chemical formula CnH2n 2 Alkynes are traditionally known as acetylenes although the name acetylene also refers specifically to C2H2 known formally as ethyne using IUPAC nomenclature Like other hydrocarbons alkynes are generally hydrophobic 2 A 3D model of ethyne acetylene the simplest alkyne Contents 1 Structure and bonding 1 1 Terminal and internal alkynes 2 Naming alkynes 3 Structural isomerism 4 Synthesis 4 1 Cracking 4 2 Dehydrohalogenation and related reactions 5 Reactions including applications 5 1 Hydrogenation 5 2 Addition of halogens and related reagents 5 3 Hydration 5 4 Tautomerism 5 5 Cycloadditions and oxidation 5 6 Reactions specific for terminal alkynes 5 7 Metal complexes 6 Alkynes in nature and medicine 7 See also 8 ReferencesStructure and bonding EditIn acetylene the H C C bond angles are 180 By virtue of this bond angle alkynes are rod like Correspondingly cyclic alkynes are rare Benzyne cannot be isolated The C C bond distance of 118 picometers for C2H2 is much shorter than the C C distance in alkenes 132 pm for C2H4 or the C C bond in alkanes 153 pm 3 Illustrative alkynes a acetylene b two depictions of propyne c 1 butyne d 2 butyne e the naturally occurring 1 phenylhepta 1 3 5 triyne and f the strained cycloheptyne Triple bonds are highlighted blue The triple bond is very strong with a bond strength of 839 kJ mol The sigma bond contributes 369 kJ mol the first pi bond contributes 268 kJ mol and the second pi bond of 202 kJ mol bond strength Bonding usually discussed in the context of molecular orbital theory which recognizes the triple bond as arising from overlap of s and p orbitals In the language of valence bond theory the carbon atoms in an alkyne bond are sp hybridized they each have two unhybridized p orbitals and two sp hybrid orbitals Overlap of an sp orbital from each atom forms one sp sp sigma bond Each p orbital on one atom overlaps one on the other atom forming two pi bonds giving a total of three bonds The remaining sp orbital on each atom can form a sigma bond to another atom for example to hydrogen atoms in the parent acetylene The two sp orbitals project on opposite sides of the carbon atom Terminal and internal alkynes Edit Internal alkynes feature carbon substituents on each acetylenic carbon Symmetrical examples include diphenylacetylene and 3 hexyne Terminal alkynes have the formula RC2H An example is methylacetylene propyne using IUPAC nomenclature Terminal alkynes like acetylene itself are mildly acidic with pKa values of around 25 They are far more acidic than alkenes and alkanes which have pKa values of around 40 and 50 respectively The acidic hydrogen on terminal alkynes can be replaced by a variety of groups resulting in halo silyl and alkoxoalkynes The carbanions generated by deprotonation of terminal alkynes are called acetylides 4 Naming alkynes EditIn systematic chemical nomenclature alkynes are named with the Greek prefix system without any additional letters Examples include ethyne or octyne In parent chains with four or more carbons it is necessary to say where the triple bond is located For octyne one can either write 3 octyne or oct 3 yne when the bond starts at the third carbon The lowest number possible is given to the triple bond When no superior functional groups are present the parent chain must include the triple bond even if it is not the longest possible carbon chain in the molecule Ethyne is commonly called by its trivial name acetylene In chemistry the suffix yne is used to denote the presence of a triple bond In organic chemistry the suffix often follows IUPAC nomenclature However inorganic compounds featuring unsaturation in the form of triple bonds may be denoted by substitutive nomenclature with the same methods used with alkynes i e the name of the corresponding saturated compound is modified by replacing the ane ending with yne diyne is used when there are two triple bonds and so on The position of unsaturation is indicated by a numerical locant immediately preceding the yne suffix or locants in the case of multiple triple bonds Locants are chosen so that the numbers are low as possible yne is also used as a suffix to name substituent groups that are triply bound to the parent compound Sometimes a number between hyphens is inserted before it to state which atoms the triple bond is between This suffix arose as a collapsed form of the end of the word acetylene The final e disappears if it is followed by another suffix that starts with a vowel 5 Structural isomerism EditAlkynes having four or more carbon atoms can form different structural isomers by having the triple bond in different positions or having some of the carbon atoms be substituents rather than part of the parent chain Other non alkyne structural isomers are also possible C2H2 acetylene only C3H4 propyne only C4H6 2 isomers 1 butyne and 2 butyne C5H8 3 isomers 1 pentyne 2 pentyne and 3 methyl butyne C6H10 7 isomers 1 hexyne 2 hexyne 3 hexyne 4 methyl 1 pentyne 4 methyl 2 pentyne 3 methyl 1 pentyne 3 3 dimethyl 1 butyneSynthesis EditCracking Edit Commercially the dominant alkyne is acetylene itself which is used as a fuel and a precursor to other compounds e g acrylates Hundreds of millions of kilograms are produced annually by partial oxidation of natural gas 6 2 CH 4 3 2 O 2 HC CH 3 H 2 O displaystyle ce 2 CH4 3 2 O2 gt HC CH 3 H2O Propyne also industrially useful is also prepared by thermal cracking of hydrocarbons Dehydrohalogenation and related reactions Edit Alkynes are prepared from 1 2 and 1 1 alkyl dihalides by double dehydrohalogenation The reaction provides a means to generate alkynes from alkenes which are first halogenated and then dehydrohalogenated For example phenylacetylene can be generated from styrene by bromination followed by treatment of the resulting of styrene dibromide with sodium amide in ammonia 7 8 Via the Fritsch Buttenberg Wiechell rearrangement alkynes are prepared from vinyl bromides Alkynes can be prepared from aldehydes using the Corey Fuchs reaction and from aldehydes or ketones by the Seyferth Gilbert homologation Vinyl chlorides are susceptible to dehydrochlorination Vinyl chlorides are available from aldehydes using the reagent chloromethylene triphenylphosphorane Reactions including applications EditFeaturing a reactive functional group alkynes participate in many organic reactions Such use was pioneered by Ralph Raphael who in 1955 wrote the first book describing their versatility as intermediates in synthesis 9 Hydrogenation Edit Being more unsaturated than alkenes alkynes characteristically undergo reactions that show that they are doubly unsaturated Alkynes are capable of adding two equivalents of H2 whereas an alkene adds only one equivalent 10 Depending on catalysts and conditions alkynes add one or two equivalents of hydrogen Partial hydrogenation stopping after the addition of only one equivalent to give the alkene is usually more desirable since alkanes are less useful The largest scale application of this technology is the conversion of acetylene to ethylene in refineries the steam cracking of alkanes yields a few percent acetylene which is selectively hydrogenated in the presence of a palladium silver catalyst For more complex alkynes the Lindlar catalyst is widely recommended to avoid formation of the alkane for example in the conversion of phenylacetylene to styrene 11 Similarly halogenation of alkynes gives the alkene dihalides or alkyl tetrahalides RC CR H 2 cis RCH CR H displaystyle ce RC CR H2 gt text cis ce RCH CR H RCH CR H H 2 RCH 2 CR H 2 displaystyle ce RCH CR H H2 gt RCH2CR H2 The addition of one equivalent of H2 to internal alkynes gives cis alkenes Addition of halogens and related reagents Edit Alkynes characteristically are capable of adding two equivalents of halogens and hydrogen halides RC CR 2 Br 2 RCBr 2 CR Br 2 displaystyle ce RC CR 2 Br2 gt RCBr2CR Br2 The addition of nonpolar E H bonds across C C is general for silanes boranes and related hydrides The hydroboration of alkynes gives vinylic boranes which oxidize to the corresponding aldehyde or ketone In the thiol yne reaction the substrate is a thiol Addition of hydrogen halides has long been of interest In the presence of mercuric chloride as a catalyst acetylene and hydrogen chloride react to give vinyl chloride While this method has been abandoned in the West it remains the main production method in China 12 Hydration Edit The hydration reaction of acetylene gives acetaldehyde The reaction proceeds by formation of vinyl alcohol which undergoes tautomerizes to form the aldehyde This reaction was once a major industrial process but it has been displaced by the Wacker process This reaction occurs in nature the catalyst being acetylene hydratase The hydration of phenylacetylene gives acetophenone 13 and the Ph3P AuCH3 catalyzed hydration of 1 8 nonadiyne to 2 8 nonanedione 14 PhC CH H 2 O PhCOCH 3 displaystyle ce PhC CH H2O gt PhCOCH3 HC C CH 2 5 C CH 2 H 2 O CH 3 CO CH 2 5 COCH 3 displaystyle ce HC C CH2 5C CH 2H2O gt CH3CO CH2 5COCH3 Tautomerism Edit Terminal alkyl alkynes exhibit tautomerism Propyne exists in equilibrium with propadiene HC C CH 3 CH 2 C CH 2 displaystyle ce HC C CH3 lt gt CH2 C CH2 Cycloadditions and oxidation Edit Alkynes undergo diverse cycloaddition reactions The Diels Alder reaction with 1 3 dienes give 1 4 cyclohexadienes This general reaction has been extensively developed Electrophilic alkynes are especially effective dienophiles The cycloadduct derived from the addition of alkynes to 2 pyrone eliminates carbon dioxide to give the aromatic compound Other specialized cycloadditions include multicomponent reactions such as alkyne trimerisation to give aromatic compounds and the 2 2 1 cycloaddition of an alkyne alkene and carbon monoxide in the Pauson Khand reaction Non carbon reagents also undergo cyclization e g Azide alkyne Huisgen cycloaddition to give triazoles Cycloaddition processes involving alkynes are often catalyzed by metals e g enyne metathesis and alkyne metathesis which allows the scrambling of carbyne RC centers RC CR R C CR 2 RC CR displaystyle ce RC CR R C CR lt gt 2RC CR Oxidative cleavage of alkynes proceeds via cycloaddition to metal oxides Most famously potassium permanganate converts alkynes to a pair of carboxylic acids Reactions specific for terminal alkynes Edit Terminal alkynes are readily converted to many derivatives e g by coupling reactions and condensations Via the condensation with formaldehyde and acetylene is produced butynediol 6 15 2 CH 2 O HC CH HOCH 2 CCCH 2 OH displaystyle ce 2CH2O HC CH gt HOCH2CCCH2OH In the Sonogashira reaction terminal alkynes are coupled with aryl or vinyl halides This reactivity exploits the fact that terminal alkynes are weak acids whose typical pKa values around 25 place them between that of ammonia 35 and ethanol 16 RC CH MX RC CM HX displaystyle ce RC CH MX gt RC CM HX where MX NaNH2 LiBu or RMgX The reactions of alkynes with certain metal cations e g Ag and Cu also gives acetylides Thus few drops of diamminesilver I hydroxide Ag NH3 2OH reacts with terminal alkynes signaled by formation of a white precipitate of the silver acetylide This reactivity is the basis of alkyne coupling reactions including the Cadiot Chodkiewicz coupling Glaser coupling and the Eglinton coupling 16 2 R H pyridine Cu OAc 2 R R displaystyle ce 2R equiv H gt ce Cu OAc 2 ce pyridine R equiv equiv R In the Favorskii reaction and in alkynylations in general terminal alkynes add to carbonyl compounds to give the hydroxyalkyne Metal complexes Edit Main article Transition metal alkyne complex Alkynes form complexes with transition metals Such complexes occur also in metal catalyzed reactions of alkynes such as alkyne trimerization Terminal alkynes including acetylene itself react with water to give aldehydes The transformation typically requires metal catalysts to give this anti Markovnikov addition result 17 Alkynes in nature and medicine EditAccording to Ferdinand Bohlmann the first naturally occurring acetylenic compound dehydromatricaria ester was isolated from an Artemisia species in 1826 In the nearly two centuries that have followed well over a thousand naturally occurring acetylenes have been discovered and reported Polyynes a subset of this class of natural products have been isolated from a wide variety of plant species cultures of higher fungi bacteria marine sponges and corals 18 Some acids like tariric acid contain an alkyne group Diynes and triynes species with the linkage RC C C CR and RC C C C C CR respectively occur in certain plants Ichthyothere Chrysanthemum Cicuta Oenanthe and other members of the Asteraceae and Apiaceae families Some examples are cicutoxin oenanthotoxin and falcarinol These compounds are highly bioactive e g as nematocides 19 1 Phenylhepta 1 3 5 triyne is illustrative of a naturally occurring triyne Alkynes occur in some pharmaceuticals including the contraceptive noretynodrel A carbon carbon triple bond is also present in marketed drugs such as the antiretroviral Efavirenz and the antifungal Terbinafine Molecules called ene diynes feature a ring containing an alkene ene between two alkyne groups diyne These compounds e g calicheamicin are some of the most aggressive antitumor drugs known so much so that the ene diyne subunit is sometimes referred to as a warhead Ene diynes undergo rearrangement via the Bergman cyclization generating highly reactive radical intermediates that attack DNA within the tumor 20 See also Edit Look up alkyne in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Alkyne yne cycloalkyneReferences Edit Alkyne Encyclopaedia Britannica Saul Patai ed 1978 The Carbon Carbon Triple Bond Vol 1 John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470771563 Smith Michael B March Jerry 2006 March s Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions Mechanisms and Structure p 24 doi 10 1002 0470084960 ISBN 9780470084960 Bloch Daniel R 2012 Organic Chemistry Demystified 2nd ed McGraw Hill p 57 ISBN 978 0 07 176797 2 The Commission on the Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry 1971 1958 A Hydrocarbons and B Fundamental Heterocyclic Systems 1965 C Characteristic Groups Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry 3rd ed London Butterworths ISBN 0 408 70144 7 a b Grafje Heinz Kornig Wolfgang Weitz Hans Martin Reiss Wolfgang Steffan Guido Diehl Herbert Bosche Horst Schneider Kurt Kieczka 2000 Butanediols Butenediol and Butynediol Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a04 455 Kenneth N Campbell Barbara K Campbell 1950 Phenylacetylene Organic Syntheses 30 72 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 030 0072 A Le Coq and A Gorgues 1979 Alkyness via Phase Transfer Catalyzed Dehydrohalogenatiion Propiolaldehyde Diethyl Acetal Organic Syntheses 59 10 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 059 0010 Raphael Ralph Alexander 1955 Acetylenic compounds in organic synthesis London Butterworths Scientific Publications OCLC 3134811 Rosser amp Williams 1977 Modern Organic Chemistry for A level Great Britain Collins p 82 ISBN 0003277402 H Lindlar R Dubuis 1973 Palladium catalyst for partial reduction of acetylenes Organic Syntheses Collective Volume vol 5 p 880 Dreher Eberhard Ludwig Torkelson Theodore R Beutel Klaus K 2011 Chlorethanes and Chloroethylenes Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 o06 o01 Fukuda Y Utimoto K 1991 Effective transformation of unactivated alkynes into ketones or acetals with a gold III catalyst J Org Chem 56 11 3729 doi 10 1021 jo00011a058 Mizushima E Cui D M Nath D C D Hayashi T Tanaka M 2005 Au I Catalyzed hydratation of alkynes 2 8 nonanedione Organic Syntheses 83 55 Peter Passler Werner Hefner Klaus Buckl Helmut Meinass Andreas Meiswinkel Hans Jurgen Wernicke Gunter Ebersberg Richard Muller Jurgen Bassler 2008 Acetylene Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a01 097 pub3 K Stockel and F Sondheimer 1974 18 Annulene Organic Syntheses 54 1 doi 10 15227 orgsyn 054 0001 Hintermann Lukas Labonne Aurelie 2007 Catalytic Hydration of Alkynes and Its Application in Synthesis Synthesis 2007 8 1121 1150 doi 10 1055 s 2007 966002 S2CID 95666091 Annabelle L K Shi Shun Rik R Tykwinski 2006 Synthesis of Naturally Occurring Polyynes Angew Chem Int Ed 45 7 1034 1057 doi 10 1002 anie 200502071 PMID 16447152 Lam Jorgen 1988 Chemistry and biology of naturally occurring acetylenes and related compounds NOARC proceedings of a Conference on the Chemistry and Biology of Naturally Occurring Acetylenes and Related Compounds NOARC Amsterdam Elsevier ISBN 0 444 87115 2 S Walker R Landovitz W D Ding G A Ellestad D Kahne 1992 Cleavage behavior of calicheamicin gamma 1 and calicheamicin T Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89 10 4608 12 Bibcode 1992PNAS 89 4608W doi 10 1073 pnas 89 10 4608 PMC 49132 PMID 1584797 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alkyne amp oldid 1152433051 Terminal and internal alkynes, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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