Naming Reactions: (1) Sandmeyer Reaction

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NAMING REACTIONS

(1) Sandmeyer Reaction:


The Sandmeyer reaction is a chemical reaction which is used to synthesize aryl halides from aryl
diazonium salts. This reaction is a method for substitution of an aromatic amino group by preparing
diazonium salt that is followed by its displacement and copper salts often catalyze it.

The Br, Cl and Cn nucleophiles can be easily present in the benzene ring of benzene diazonium salt
in the presence of Copper ion.

(2) Gattermann Reaction:


Bromine and Chlorine can be present in the benzene ring by preparing the benzene diazonium salt
solution with similar halogen acid present with copper powder. This is the Gattermann Reaction.

(3) Balz-Schiemann Reaction:


When arene-diazonium chloride is prepared with fluoroboric acid, arene diazonium fluoroborate is
precipitated and decomposes to yield aryl fluoride which on heating.

(4) Finkelstein Reaction:


In the Finkelstein Reaction Alkyl iodides are prepared easily by the reaction of alkyl chlorides with
Nal in dry acetone.
(5) Swarts Reaction:
When alkyl chloride is heated in the presence of a metallic fluoride like AgF, Hg2F2, SbF3 or CoF2, we
get alkyl fluorides.

(6) Wurtz Reaction:


When Alkyl halides get reacted with sodium with dry ether, we get hydrocarbons that include the
double number of carbon atoms present in the halide. This is known as the Wurtz Reaction

(7) Wurtz-Fittig Reaction:


When a mixture of alkyl halide and aryl halide gets treated with sodium in dry ether, we get an alkyl
arene.

(8) Fittig Reaction:


Aryl halides prepared with sodium in dry ether to give analogous compounds where two aryl groups
joined.

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(9) Friedel-Crafts alkylation Reaction:
Benzene is prepared with an alkyl halide in the presence of anhydrous aluminum chloride to give
Alkylbenzene.

This is the Friedel-Crafts alkylation Reaction

(10) Friedel-Crafts acylation reaction:


We get acyl benzene when an acyl halide is reacted with benzene in the presence of Lewis acids.

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Also Read: Acetylation

(11) Reimer-Tiemann Reaction:


When preparing phenol with chloroform in the presence of sodium hydroxide, -CHO group is present
at the ortho position of the benzene ring which results into salicylaldehyde.

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(12) Kolbe’s Reaction:
Phenol reacts with sodium hydroxide to give sodium phenoxide which then reacts with carbon
dioxide in acidic medium to give hydroxybenzoic acid.

(13) Rosenmund Reduction:


When Acyl chloride is hydrogenated to an aldehyde over a catalyst, known as Rosenmund catalyst
which is either palladium or barium sulfate.

(14) Stephen reaction:


Nitriles with stannous chloride in the presence of hydrochloric acid reduced to the corresponding
imine and give the corresponding aldehyde after hydrolysis.

(15) Etard reaction:


Chromyl chloride oxidizes methyl group to get chromium complex which on hydrolysis provides
corresponding benzaldehyde.

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(16) Gatterman – Koch reaction:
Benzene is prepared with carbon monoxide and hydrogen chloride in the presence of anhydrous
aluminum chloride to give benzaldehyde.

(17) Clemmensen Reduction:


In Clemmensen reduction, Carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones on treatment with zinc-
amalgam and concentrated hydrochloric acid reduced to CH2 group.

(18) Wolff Kishner Reduction:


Carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones on treatment with hydrazine which on heating with sodium
hydroxide in a high boiling solvent (ethylene glycol) reduced to CH2 group.

(19) Tollens’ test:


Heating an aldehyde with fresh prepared ammoniacal silver nitrate solution produces a bright silver
mirror due to the formation of silver metal.

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(20) Fehling’s test:
Fehling’s solution A (aqueous copper sulfate) and Fehling solution B (alkaline sodium potassium
tartrate) are mixed in equal amounts before the test. A reddish brown precipitate is obtained when
an aldehyde is heated with Fehling’s reagent.

(21) Aldol reaction:


Aldehydes and ketones having one α-hydrogen undergo a reaction in the presence of dilute alkali as
the catalyst to produce β-hydroxy aldehydes or β-hydroxy ketones.

(22) Aldol condensation:


Aldol and Ketol lose water to provide α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds which are aldol
condensation products.

(23) Cross aldol condensation:


Aldol condensation is carried out between two different aldehydes and ketones. It gives a mixture of
four products if both of them includes α-hydrogen atoms.

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(24) Cannizzaro reaction:
Aldehydes without α-hydrogen atom undergo self-oxidation and reduction reaction when prepared
with concentrated alkali.

(25) Kolbe electrolysis:


in Kolbe electrolysis, An aqueous solution of sodium or potassium salt of a carboxylic acid gives
alkane containing an even number of carbon atoms on electrolysis.

(26) Hell-Volhard-Zelinsky (HVZ )reaction:


Carboxylic acids having a α-hydrogen are halogenated at the α-position give α-halo carboxylic acids
on treatment with chlorine or bromine in the presence of small amount of red phosphorus.

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(27) Gabriel phthalimide synthesis:
Phthalimide prepared with ethanolic potassium hydroxide produces potassium salt of phthalimide
when heated with alkyl halide followed by alkaline hydrolysis forms the corresponding primary
amine.

(28) Hoffmann bromamide degradation reaction:


An amide with bromine in an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide produces primary amines.
Migration of an alkyl or aryl group takes place from carbonyl carbon of the amide to the nitrogen
atom. The amine so produced include one carbon less than that present in the amide.

(29) Carbylamine reaction:


Aliphatic and aromatic primary amines when heated with chloroform and ethanolic potassium
hydroxide produces isocyanides or carbyl amines which are foul smelling substances.

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(30) Hinsberg’s Test:
Benzenesulfonyl chloride (C6H5SO2Cl) reacts with primary and secondary amines to produce
sulphonamides.
1. The reaction of benzene-sulfonyl chloride with primary amine yields N-ethyl benzene-
sulfonyl amide. The hydrogen attached to the nitrogen in sulphonamide is strongly
acidic due to the presence of strong electron withdrawing sulfonyl group. Hence, it is
soluble in alkali.

2. In the reaction with a secondary amine, N, N-diethyl- benzenesulfonamide is formed.


Since N, N- diethyl benzene sulphonamide does not contain any hydrogen atom
attached to a nitrogen atom, it is not acidic and hence insoluble in alkali.

3. Tertiary amines do not react with benzene-sulfonyl chloride.

(31) Coupling Reactions:


Benzene diazonium chloride gets reacted with phenol in which the phenol molecule at its para
position is mixed with the diazonium salt to give p-hydroxyazobenzene.

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