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Homologation reaction Totally Explained
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Everything about Homologation Reaction totally explainedA homologation reaction, also known as homologization, is any chemical reaction that effects an overall increase of the carbon skeleton of a saturated reactant molecule. The reactants undergo a homologation converting them into the next member of the homologous series. For example the reaction of aldehydes and ketones with diazomethane or methoxymethylenetriphenylphosphine effectively inserts a methylene (-CH 2-) unit in the hydrocarbon chain and the reaction product is the next homologue.
Examples of homologation reactions include:
Some reactions increase the chain length by more than one unit. For example, the following are considered two-carbon homologation reactions:
Nucleophilic addition to ethylene oxide, resulting in a ring-opening and producing a primary alcohol with two extra carbons.
Malonic ester synthesis, which produces a carboxylic acid with two extra carbons.
Chain reduction
Likewise the chain length can also be reduced:
In the Gallagher-Hollander Degradation (1946) pyruvic acid is removed from a linear aliphatic carboxylic acid yielding a new acid with 2 carbon atoms less . The original publication concerns the conversion of bile acid in a series of reactions: acid chloride (2) formation with thionyl chloride, diazoketone formation (3) with diazomethane, chloromethyl ketone formation (4) with hydrochloric acid, organic reduction of chlorine to methylketone (5), ketone halogenation to 6, elimination reaction with pyridine to enone 7 and finally oxidation with chromium trioxide to bisnorcholanic acid 8. »
In the Hooker reaction (1936) an alkyl chain in a certain naphthoquinone (phenomenon first observed in the compound lapachol) is reduced by one methylene unit as carbon dioxide in each potassium permanganate oxidation . »
Mechanistically oxidation causes ring-cleavage at the alkene group, extrusion of carbon dioxide in decarboxylation with subsequent ring-closure.
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