820 CHAPTER 19 Carbonyl Compounds III
O
CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 COH + CO 2 + AgBr
- Ag 2 O
- Br 2 , ∆ CH^3 CH^2 CH^2 CH^2 Br
pentanoic acid 1-bromobutane
THE HUNSDIECKER REACTION
Heinz and Clare Hunsdiecker found that a car-
boxylic acid can be decarboxylated if a heavy
metal salt of the carboxylic acid is heated with bromine or io-
dine. The product is an alkyl halide with one less carbon atom
than the starting carboxylic acid. The heavy metal can be silver
ion, mercuric ion, or lead(IV). The reaction is now known as
the Hunsdiecker reaction.
The reaction involves formation of a hypobromite as a result of
precipitation of AgBr. A radical reaction is initiated by ho-
molytic cleavage of the bond of the hypobromite. The
carboxyl radical loses and the alkyl radical thus formed
abstracts a bromine radical from the hypobromite to propagate
the reaction.
a hypobromite
O
RCO−Ag+ + Br 2 Br + AgBr
O
RCO
CO 2 ,
O¬Br
O
RCO
O
RCO
O
Br RCO + Br
O
R CO R+ CO 2
O
RCO Br + R RBr +
initiation step
propagation step
propagation step
In summary, carboxylic acids with a carbonyl group at the 3-position (both
acids and acids) lose when they are heated.
OO
CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CCH 2 COH + CO 2
+ CO 2
∆
∆
O
CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CCH 3
OO
CH 3
HOCCHCOH + CO 2
∆
O
CH 3 CH 2 COH
O
COOH
O
3-oxohexanoic acid
2-oxocyclohexane-
carboxylic acid
2-pentanone
-methylmalonic acid
propionic acid
cyclohexanone
b-ketocarboxylic b-dicarboxylic CO 2
PROBLEM 34
Which of the following compounds would be expected to decarboxylate when heated?
a. c.
b. d.
HO
OO OO
O
OH
O
HO
OO
OH
Heinz (1904–1981) andClare
(1903–1995) Hunsdieckerwere both
born in Germany, Heinz in Cologne
and Clare in Kiel. They both received
Ph.D.s from the University of
Cologne and spent their careers
working in a private laboratory in
Cologne.