Author Topic: Nitroethane from... Nitromethane? Why not?  (Read 2649 times)

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SpicyBrown

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Nitroethane from... Nitromethane? Why not?
« on: December 14, 2002, 08:00:00 PM »
Is there any reason why nitromethane couldn't be deprotonated at the carbon with a base, then treated with methyl iodide to yield nitroethane?

At first glance I'd think this could work- a simple alkylation, sort of... Although I've never seen mention of it.

SpicyBrown

Rhodium

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Resonance forms
« Reply #1 on: December 14, 2002, 11:16:00 PM »
If you deprotonate nitromethane, the negative charge will without doubt mostly reside on the oxygens rather than on the carbon atom as 1) oxygen is more electronegative than carbon and 2) there are two of them. Thus O-alkylation will predominate.

This is also the reason we cannot alkylate nitroethane with benzyl chloride to form phenyl-2-nitropropanes directly.

I think I have seen only one exception to this rule and that was the alkylation of 2-nitropropane with p-nitrobenzyl chloride, forming p-nitrophenyl-2-nitro-2-methylpropane, and the authors of the article somehow concluded that no other combinations worked. para-aminophentermine, anyone?  ;)

SpicyBrown

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Oh yea...
« Reply #2 on: December 15, 2002, 11:05:00 AM »
Oops! Didn't even think of that. Makes sense.... Thanks Rodhium.

SpicyBrown