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Ketones, aliphatic, reduction Clemmensen reaction

Clemmensen reaction. The Clemmensen method of reduction (1913) consists in refluxing a ketone with amalgamated zinc and hydrochloric acid. Acetophenone, for example, is reduced to ethylbenzene. The method is applicable to the reduction of most aromatic-aliphatic ketones to at least some aliphatic and alicyclic ketones, to the y-keto acids obtainable by Friedel-Crafts condensations with succinic anhydride (succinolylation), and to the cyclic ketones formed by intramolecular condensation. [Pg.308]

Aliphatic hydrocarbons can be prepared by the reduction of the readily accessible ketones with amalgamated zinc and concentrated hydrochloric acid (Clemmensen method of reduction). This procedure is particularly valuable for the prep>aration of hydrocarbons wdth an odd number of carbon atoms where the Wurtz reaction cannot be applied with the higher hydrocarbons some secondary alcohol is produced, which must be removed by repeated distillation from sodium. [Pg.238]

Many reactions are not affected by the presence of a nearby benzene ring yet others depend on the aromatic ring to promote the reaction. For example, the Clemmensen reduction is occasionally used to reduce aliphatic ketones to alkanes, but it works best reducing aryl ketones to alkylbenzenes. Several additional side-chain reactions show the effects of a nearby aromatic ring. [Pg.798]


See other pages where Ketones, aliphatic, reduction Clemmensen reaction is mentioned: [Pg.125]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.344 ]




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