Alternatively, the of an aldehyde or a ketone can be made to react with a
nucleophileby first brominating the of the carbonyl compound.
PROBLEM 15
Describe how the following compounds could be prepared using an enamine intermediate:
a. b.
19.10 Alkylation of the -Carbon:
The Michael Reaction
In Section 18.13, you saw that nucleophiles react with aldehydes and
ketones, forming either direct addition products or conjugate addition products; in
Section 18.14, you saw that nucleophiles react with carboxylic acid
derivatives, forming either nucleophilic acyl substitution products or conjugate addi-
tion products.
When the nucleophile is an enolate, the addition reaction has a special name—it is
called a Michael reaction. The enolates that work best in Michael reactions are those
that are flanked by two electron-withdrawing groups: enolates of
esters, and nitriles. Because these enolates are relatively
weak bases, addition occurs at the of aldehydes and ke-
tones. The enolates also add to the of esters and amides be-
cause of the low reactivity of the carbonyl group. Notice that Michael reactions form
1,5-dicarbonyl compounds—if one carbonyl carbon is given the 1-position, the other
carbonyl carbon is at the 5-position.
b-carbon a,b-unsaturated
b-carbon a,b-unsaturated
b-diesters,b-keto b-keto
b-diketones,
O
RCH CHCR
- Nu
O
RCH CHCR +
direct addition conjugate addition
OH
Nu Nu
RCHCH 2 CR
- H 3 O+
−
a,b-unsaturated
a,b-unsaturated
B
O O
CCH 2 CH 3
O
CH 2 CH 2 CH 3
Br 2
H 3 O+
O O O
Br −Nu Nu
a-position
a-carbon
OOO
CH 2 CHCH CH 3 CCH 2 CCH 3
O
CH 2 CH 2 CH
an , -unsaturated a -diketone
aldehyde
+
HO−
OO
CH 3 CCHCCH 3
OOO
CH 3 CH CHCCH 3 CH 3 CH 2 OCCH 2 COCH 2 CH 3
O
CH 3 CHCH 2 CCH 3
an , -unsaturated a -diester
ketone
+
CH 3 CH 2 O−
O
CH(COCH 2 CH 3 ) 2
804 CHAPTER 19 Carbonyl Compounds III
Michael reactions form 1,5-dicarbonyl
compounds.
Arthur Michael (1853–1942)was
born in Buffalo, New York. He studied
at the University of Heidelberg, the
University of Berlin, and L’École de
Médicine in Paris. He was a
professor of chemistry at Tufts and
Harvard Universities, retiring
from Harvard when he was 83.