Sciencemadness Discussion Board

1-(2-Thienyl)acetone?

NitrousBoost - 30-1-2015 at 12:08

Will it work, or does the acetone have to form an enolate? Maybe sodium hydroxide or sodium ethoxide?

Chemosynthesis - 30-1-2015 at 15:44

First, excellent use of structural drawings. I find that representation extremely helpful in communicating a proposal, and it's easier for me to consider questions in that type of format.

You want an enolate to initiate nucleophilic attack on an aromatic substrate? This is extremely unlikely to be favorable at any realistic conditions, and there are only a handful of special cases where this happens under normal conditions. The thiophene has a large amount of conjugated pi system in there that just makes it very hard to nucleophilicly assault.

What I would suggest as a reasonable alternative, though not hobby friendly, would be a Friedel Crafts acylation. Very standard, achievable undergraduate intro organic chemistry reaction, and plenty of literature to follow.
An example can be found in J. Org. Chem., 1966, 31 (4), pp 1283–1285
DOI: 10.1021/jo01342a508

Your biggest methodological hurdle would be the obvious necessity of using halogenated acetone, which is lachrymatory to the point of being one of the incipient chemical weapons of the early 20th Century.

turd - 31-1-2015 at 02:22

Quote: Originally posted by NitrousBoost  
Will it work

No. But at lest for iodobenzene it does work with cheap acetylacetone:
https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/p2p.acetyla...

I've also had some success with bromobenzene and the article posted by solo:
https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=16...

Thiophene is more electron rich so you might have to do some optimization.

CuReUS - 31-1-2015 at 04:17

Quote: Originally posted by Chemosynthesis  
First, excellent use of structural drawings. I find that representation extremely helpful in communicating a proposal, and it's easier for me to consider questions in that type of format.

how do you draw such structures ? what software do you use.please tell me
Quote:
You want an enolate to initiate nucleophilic attack on an aromatic substrate? This is extremely unlikely to be favorable at any realistic conditions, and there are only a handful of special cases where this happens under normal conditions. The thiophene has a large amount of conjugated pi system in there that just makes it very hard to nucleophilicly assault

maybe we could make use of the branch of chemistry designed for such "impossible" reactions-umpolung
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umpolung
I am not smart enough to tell you how to use it though:(
maybe lord nicodem could give us some advice;):D
Quote:
What I would suggest as a reasonable alternative, though not hobby friendly, would be a Friedel Crafts acylation

chemo,don't you mean alkylation ? and why do you say F.C is not hobby friendly.do you mean the use of AlCl3 or FeCl3?
since thiopene is more activated than benzene,I think weaker lewis acids like SnCl4 or ZnCl2 could be used
Quote:
Your biggest methodological hurdle would be the obvious necessity of using halogenated acetone, which is lachrymatory to the point of being one of the incipient chemical weapons of the early 20th Century

I recently found out it was carcinogenic as well:(
http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=61289&...

the acetoacetate idea looks good,but I noticed that you would need a stream of N2 gas,why ?
maybe you could do it in a method similar to the allylbenzene-->>>P2P using wacker oxidation
UTSE for ways to make allylbenzene
Quote:
Will it work, or does the acetone have to form an enolate? Maybe sodium hydroxide or sodium ethoxide?

maybe,if you used soda amide or n-butyllithium

another reaction,just to explore all possibilities
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meerwein_arylation
see under scope

[Edited on 31-1-2015 by CuReUS]

Chemosynthesis - 31-1-2015 at 09:57

Yes, I meant to say alkylation. Thank you. I say it is not friendly to a hobbyist (in this instance) due to the use of haloacetone, which is acutely fairly toxic as well, even though sometimes F.C. can be fairly Lewis acid specific, which may be superficially problematic to those unwilling or unable to replicate Chainhit's "thug furnace." Can you cite an example with tin or a similar substitute? Haloacetones are less reactive than typical F.C. reagents.

As an aside, a F.C. is an umpolung relative the enolate.
Using a strong, non-nucleophilic base wouldn't overcome the harshness of trying to add electrons to a nucleophilic, aromatic ring.
If the poster proposed this reaction for us, my opinion is for them to study the classic introductory reactions first before moving on to other wonderful suggestions.

[Edited on 31-1-2015 by Chemosynthesis]

CuReUS - 1-2-2015 at 04:06

yesterday night I had a breakthrough,I have found the perfect reaction for you
this reaction works for bromobenzene,so I think it should work here too.It is basically a beta-keto ester decarboxylation.The reaction goes like this:

make sodium ethoxide first,and to that add a mixture of ethylacetoacetate(EAA) and bromobenzene
you will get a beta-keto ester.Treat this with H2SO4 .The acid decomposes the beta keto ester to give CO2 and your aryl ketone,which in this case is phenylacetone
Quote:
PHENYLACETONE FROM B-KETO ESTERS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this chapter, I will cover two separate but similar methods of
making phenylacetone. Neither of them is actually suitable for
industrial-scale production, but they have the advantage of not using
phenylacetic acid. This allows an underground chemist to diversify the
chemicals used, and enables him to defeat a blockade on his phenylacetic
acid supply. Neither of these reactions is foolproof; both require a
certain amount of laboratory skill. The chemicals must be weighed and
measured fairly exactly. This is unlike the method described in Chapter 3,
where anything within a ballpark range will work. These methods require a
reliable scale.
Both of these reactions use sodium metal, which is some nasty stuff. It
reacts violently with water to produce sodium hydroxide and hydrogen. It
will also react with air. The chemist never touches it intentionally; if he
does touch it, he washes it off with warm water. Sodium metal comes in a
can, covered with a bath of petroleum distillate. This is to protect it
from water and air. As long as it stays covered, it causes the chemist no
problems.
In this reaction, sodium metal is reacted with absolute alcohol to make
sodium ethoxide (NaOCH2CH3). Ethyl acetoacetate and bromobenzene are then
added to this to produce a beta keto ester. Reaction with acid then
produces phenylacetone.
A side reaction which sometimes becomes a problem is bromobenzene
reacting with beta keto ester to produce di-phenylacetone. This can be
controlled by not using too much bromobenzene, adding it slowly and
stirring it well.
Figure 12 shows the glassware used. The glassware must be very dry, so
it is dried out in the oven for an hour or so. If the sep funnel has a
plastic valve, the valve is taken out before the sep funnel is put in the
oven. The magnetic stirring bar does not go in the oven either. It is
coated with Teflon, so it does not have any water on it. A magnetic stirrer
is necessary to do this reaction, because good stirring is very important.
An extra claisen adapter is needed for this reaction; one is filled with
broken pieces of glass for use as a fractionating column, the other is kept
as is for use in the Figure 12 apparatus.
To begin, the underground chemist puts a bed of Drierite in the vacuum
adapter as shown in Figure 2a, being sure to plug up the vacuum nipple. The
water lines are attached to the condenser and cold water started flowing
through it. But if it is humid, the water flow is not started until the
glassware is assembled.
The can of sodium is opened. A chunk about the size of a medium egg is
needed. The chemist selects a convenient corner of the block of sodium to
work on. With a clean, sharp knife, he scrapes off any discolored skin
there might be in the area he plans to use. Good clean sodium has a bright
metallic look. He keeps the block under the petroleum as he scrapes the
discolored skin.
Now he must weigh the sodium. A 100 ml beaker is filled halffull of the
petroleum distillate from the can of sodium, or with xylene. He puts it on
the scale and weighs it. He needs 34.5 grams of sodium metal, so with a
clean sharp knife. he cuts off a chunk of sodium, transfers it to the
beaker and weighs it. If it is not quite 34.5 grams, he cuts a little more
sodium and adds it to the beaker. This is done quickly, so that evaporation
of the petroleum does not throw the measurement off. Then another 100 ml
beaker is filled half-full of anhydrous ethyl ether. The sodium metal is
transferred to it with a spoon. The petroleum is poured back in with the
block of sodium and the can sealed up so that it does not evaporate. With a
clean sharp knife, the sodium is cut up into little pieces about 1/2 the
size of a pea.
The sodium is kept under the ether while this is being done. Eye
protection is always worn when working with sodium.
After the sodium is cut up, the magnetic stirring bar is put in the
2000 ml flask. Then the sodium metal pieces are scooped out with a spoon
and put in the 2000 ml flask. The glassware is immediately assembled as
shown in Figure 12. One liter (1000 ml) of absolute ethyl alcohol is
measured out. Absolute alcohol absorbs water out of air, so this is done
rapidly. Here's how. The chemist gets a quart beer bottle, marks on the
outside how full one liter is, and bakes the bottle in the oven to dry it
out. When he takes it out of the oven, he sucks the hot, moist air out of
it with a section of glass tubing. Once it has cooled down, he fills it
with one liter of absolute alcohol and stoppers it to keep it dry. He wants
to get the alcohol in with the sodium before the ether on it evaporates,
and this saves him the time of measuring it out.
About 200 ml of the absolute alcohol is put in the sep funnel and the
valve opened to allow the alcohol to flow down onto the sodium metal. Cold
water should be flowing through the condenser. Magnetic stirring is not
necessary at this time, but the 2000 ml flask is sitting in a large pan. A
pail of cold water and a towel are kept handy. Sodium and alcohol react
together vigorously, and the alcohol boils like crazy. The condenser is
checked to see how far up the alcohol vapors are reaching. The chemist does
not want the alcohol vapors to escape out the top of the condenser. If the
vapors are making it more than halfway up the condenser, cold water is
poured from the pail into the pan the flask is sitting in. That cools it
off and slows down the boiling. But if that does not do enough, the wet
towel is put on top of the flask. When the boiling slows down, the towel
and the pan of water are removed, then more alcohol is added to the sep
funnel. A fresh ball of cotton is put in the top of the sep funnel to
protect the alcohol from water in the air. The alcohol is added to the
flask at such a Mte that the boiling of the alcohol continues at a nice
Mte. When all of the original one liter of absolute alcohol has been added
to the flask, the flask is gently heated on the hot plate to keep the
alcohol boiling until the little pieces of sodium are dissolved. If the
chemist has done a very good job, the result is a clear solution. If not,
it will be milkycolored.
The magnetic stirring is now begun, and 195 grams (190 ml) of
ethylacetoacetate is put in the sep funnel over the next 15 minutes. The
solution is heated to a gentle boiling. As it is boiling and stirring, 236
grams of bromobenzene is put in the sep funnel and dripped into it over a
period of an hour. The boiling and stirring is continued for 8 hours.
Then the stirring is stopped and the solution allowed to cool down. A
good amount of sodium bromide crystals settle to the bottom of the flask.
When they have settled to the bottom, the glassware is taken apart and as
much of the alcohol solution as possible is poured into a 3000 ml flask.
The last of the product is rinsed off the sodium bromide crystals by adding
about 50 ml of absolute alcohol to them, swirling around the mixture, then
filtering it. This alcohol is added to the alcohol in the 3000 ml flask.
The glassware is set up as shown in Figure 3 in Chapter 3. A 1000 ml
flask is used as the collecting flask. The alcohol in the 3000 ml flask is
heated. The oil in the pan is not heated above 115ø C. The distillation is
continued until the chemist has collected over 900 ml of alcohol in the
collecting flask.
When the alcohol has been boiled out, the heat is turned off and the
flask removed from the pan of oil. As it is cooling off, 1500 ml of 5%
sodium hydroxide solution is mixed. To do this, 75 grams of sodium
hydroxide is put in a flask and 1400 ml of water added. (Lye may be used as
a sodium hydroxide substitute.) When both the sodium hydroxide solution and
the reaction mixture near room temperature, the sodium hydroxide solution
is poured into the 3000 ml flask with the reaction mixture. The magnetic
stirring bar is put into the flask and magnetic stirring is begun. It is
stirred fast enough that a whirlpool develops in the mixture and the~beta
keto ester gets into contact with the sodium hydroxide solution. The
stirring is continued for 4 hours without heating the solution. The beta
keto ester reacts with the sodium hydroxide to produce the compound shown
above, plus ethyl alcohol. This is a hydrolysis reaction.
After 4 hours of stirring, the stirring is stopped and the solution
allowed to sit for a few minutes. A small amount of unreacted material will
float up to the top. If there is a large amount of unreacted material, the
stirring is begun again and 40 grams of sodium hydroxide and 300 ml of
isopropyl rubbing alcohol are added. It is stirred for 4 more hours. But
generally this is not necessary.
The unreacted layer is poured into a 1000 ml sep funnel. A good deal of
the sodium hydroxide solution will be poured off with it. The chemist lets
it sit for a few minutes, then drains the sodium hydroxide solution back
into the 3000 ml flask. The oily unreacted material is poured into a small
glass bottle and kept in the freezer. When a good amount of it has
accumulated, the chemist tries reacting it again with 5% sodium hydroxide
solution. However, this will not yield very much more product, because most
of this oily material is the diphenylacetone byproduct.
The underground chemist is now ready to produce phenylacetone. The
compound shown above will react with sulffiuric acid to produce
phenylacetone and carbon dioxide gas. He mixes up 150 ml of 50% sulffiuric
acid. To do this, he adds slightly more than 55 ml of sulfuric acid to
slightly less than 105 ml of water; if he added more sodium hydroxide and
alcohol to his reaction mixture, he mixes up twice as much 50% sulfuric
acid.
The stirrer in the 3000 ml flask containing the sodium hydroxide is
started up again. Then the 50% sulffiuric acid is slowly added to it. It
will bubble out carbon dioxide like crazy and crystals of sodium sulfate
will be formed. Phenylacetone will also be formed, some of it floating on
the surface of the solution, some of it trapped among the crystals formed.
When all of the sulffiuric acid has been added, and the bubbling of carbon
dioxide has slowed down to just about stopping, the stirring is stopped.
The glassware is set up as shown in Figure 3. The collecting flask is
2000 ml. The 3000 ml flask is slowly heated to boiling. The steam carries
the phenylacetone along with it to the other flask. This process is called
a steam distillation. The distilling is continued until a little more than
1000 ml is in the collecting flask. By then, almost all the phenylacetone
will be carried over into the collecting flask. There will be two layers in
the collecting flask, a yellow layer of phenylacetone on top, and a clear
water layer. There will be some acid dissolved in the water. Forty grams of
sodium hydroxide is dissolved in 150 ml of water, then added to the 2000 ml
flask. The flask is stoppered and shaken for one minute to destroy the
acid. Then 100 ml of benzene is added to the flask and it is shaken some
more. The phenylacetonebenzene layer is poured into a 1000 ml sep ffiunnel
and allowed to sit for a couple of minutes. Then the water layer is drained
off back into the 2000 ml flask. The phenylacetone layer is poured into a
500 ml flask along with a few boiling chips. Then 100 ml of benzene is
added to the 2000 ml flask, which is shaken again for about 30 seconds
before it is allowed to sit for a few minutes. The benzene layer is poured
into the 1000 ml sep funnel and allowed to sit for a couple of minutes. The
water layer is drained out, and the benzene layer is poured into the 500 ml
flask with the rest of the phenylacetone. The glassware is set up as shown
in Figure 5 and the phenylacetone distilled as described in Chapter 3. The
yield is about 125 ml of phenylacetone. (For more information on thisreaction, see Organic Reactions, Volume 1, published in 1942, page 266.)

Secrets of Methamphetamine Manufacture (3rd ed.)
by Uncle Fester

EAA can be easily made http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethyl_acetoacetate#Preparation
also to make allylthiopene,treat 2-iodothiopene with Mg to make a grignard reagent and then react it with allylbromide to get allylthiopene
then do wacker oxidation to get your ketone
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wacker_process#Wacker.E2.80.93T...
Quote:
sometimes F.C. can be fairly Lewis acid specific, which may be superficially problematic to those unwilling or unable to replicate Chainhit's "thug furnace."

I didn't understand what you said,please tell again:(
Quote:
Can you cite an example with tin or a similar substitute?

http://www.uio.no/studier/emner/matnat/kjemi/KJM5220/h07/und...
read Pg 4

But nitrous boost,please do the reaction,this shouldn't be an example of mental masterbation or fantasizing;)

Nicodem - 1-2-2015 at 13:09

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  
But nitrous boost,please do the reaction,this shouldn't be an example of mental masterbation or fantasizing;)

Let me guess, is it because you don't want this topic to remain a mental masturbation that you decided to spam it with Uncle Fester's mental masturbations?

Chemosynthesis - 1-2-2015 at 14:29

Turd's post of the acetoacetone and article solo had was better from the standpoint of avoiding yield loss with a subsequent Wacker oxidation, and the expense of catalyst. Similar concept, though.
Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I didn't understand what you said,please tell again:(

There was a sciencemadness thread posted way back about making aluminum trichloride with a crude furnace. One of the members I often wonder about, since we used to post on the same forum on another website.

Quote:

http://www.uio.no/studier/emner/matnat/kjemi/KJM5220/h07/und...
read Pg 4

Good link, however, the problem is that your link notes that alkylation is "not good react" here, in contrast with the acylation. Given haloalkanes' relative reactivity to many other alkylations, I would be surprised if this were viable with tin. It might not be with ferrous or aluminum chlorides either, but they would be more likely if that were the scheme tested.

CuReUS - 2-2-2015 at 00:12

Quote: Originally posted by Nicodem  

Let me guess, is it because you don't want this topic to remain a mental masturbation that you decided to spam it with Uncle Fester's mental masturbations?

you had humiliated uncle fester in another thread too.I checked out the acetoacetic ester reaction before posting and its right
http://matematicas.udea.edu.co/~carlopez/Organic_Name_Reacti...

even eleusis couldn't tame fester
https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/eleusis/ele...
this is what eleusis had to say about the beta-keto ester method in fester's book
Quote:
Chapter 7
This is actually a pretty clever way of making P-2-P, but let's face it - a sodium alkoxide reduction is *not* within the grasp of the average chemical tinkerer. This is potentially dangerous stuff, you have been warned. Also, a ball of cotton is not an acceptable method of excluding water vapor from getting into the reaction unless you live in a desert region. Use an appropriate drying tube packed with Calcium Chloride or Sodium Hydroxide.

If you say eleusis is a fool too,you will surely get stung;)

[Edited on 3-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Loptr - 2-2-2015 at 08:56

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  


If you say eleusis is a fool too,you will surely get stung;)

[Edited on 2-2-2015 by CuReUS]


Where did he end up? Prison?

That would be my definition of a fool.

Chemosynthesis - 2-2-2015 at 17:58

Jenkins admitted to ordering all kinds of chemicals and glassware, including precursors, in his real name, with his personal credit card, to his places of residence... knowing this was probably insanely stupid. I'd say that's foolish, regardless of how much determination and intellect it took to teach himself a decent amount of organic chemistry as an English major.

CuReUS - 2-2-2015 at 23:16

that's not the point.He didn't want to run a drug empire,he only wanted the experience
and that was not the reason why he got caught.It was because of his stupid GF:mad:
https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/eleusis/mem...

anyways,my intention of mentioning eleusis was to show nicodem that he is not the only one who knows chemistry and he has no right to humiliate people before doing a background search
I am sure nicodem has not even read uncle fester's secret of meth manufacture.He must have stumbled across a thread in the hive by an incompetant and idiotic wannabe meth cook who had tried to replicate fester's instructions and failed and was complaining about it
If nicodem is so smart,why doesn't he provide a synthesis route to 1-(2-Thienyl)acetone?

[Edited on 3-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Chemosynthesis - 2-2-2015 at 23:49

I don't see how purported motivation cancels out admitted flagrant violations of the law with no regard for the ramifications.
Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  
that's not the point.He didn't want to run a drug empire,he only wanted the experience
and that was not the reason why he got caught.It was because of his stupid GF:mad:
https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/eleusis/mem...
It was still foolish, and to say he was caught because of his girlfriend when law enforcement had intercepted his package earlier is questionable.

Preisler does have a chemistry background with his undergraduate degree and experience in methamphetamine manufacture, but he is not above criticism, and there remains a lot of criticism of his works, on Amazon, wikipedia, and elsewhere. Whether it's relevant to the portion you posted, or if the reaction is particularly viable for thiophenes, I can't say.

Darkstar - 3-2-2015 at 03:44

If you're up to it, what about a Grignard reaction between (thiophen-2-yl)magnesium iodide and propylene oxide? This would give a secondary alcohol (after an acidic workup) that could be oxidized to your ketone. Or, instead of oxidizing it and doing reductive amination, you could convert the alcohol to an alkyl bromide/iodide and try aminating that instead.

Forgive me if I'm mistaken, but I'm assuming your target molecule is thiopropamine/methiopropamine? You don't have to answer. Just something to consider if you're seriously planning on trying this synthesis.

possible route3.bmp - 249kB

CuReUS - 3-2-2015 at 08:43

Quote: Originally posted by Darkstar  
If you're up to it, what about a Grignard reaction between (thiophen-2-yl)magnesium iodide and propylene oxide? This would give a secondary alcohol (after an acidic workup) that could be oxidized to your ketone

I might be wrong but if you try to oxidise the secondary alcohol,the sulphur too might get oxidised to form sulphones and sulphoxides
a mild oxidising agent like bleach cannot be used as the ketone is a methyl ketone so haloform reaction will take place and you will end up with chloroform
Quote:
Forgive me if I'm mistaken, but I'm assuming your target molecule is thiopropamine/methiopropamine? You don't have to answer

I dont think he is going to try the synthesis at all.Mostly this is a homework problem ,that's why he posted it in "beginning" and not in the organic chemistry section
BTW,how did you draw the strcutures

[Edited on 3-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Darkstar - 3-2-2015 at 09:18

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I might be wrong but if you try to oxidise the secondary alcohol,the sulphur too might get oxidised to form sulphones and sulphoxides


Thiophenes are actually quite resistant to oxidation. Remember that it's an aromatic system.

Quote:

a mild oxidising agent like bleach cannot be used as the ketone is a methyl ketone so haloform reaction will take place and you will end up with chloroform


There are plenty of other options, though. (some available to the home chemist, some not) One that's mild and selective towards secondary alcohols would be preferable.

Quote:

I dont think he is going to try the synthesis at all.Mostly this is a homework problem ,that's why he posted it in "beginning" and not in the organic chemistry section


Seems like a strange homework problem, though, given that it's an obvious drug precursor and all. Who knows... Maybe he has a cool professor? Either way, Grignards aren't exactly all that easy to pull off anyway.

Quote:

BTW,how did you draw the strcutures


ChemDraw Pro.

Chemosynthesis - 3-2-2015 at 16:12

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I dont think he is going to try the synthesis at all.Mostly this is a homework problem ,that's why he posted it in "beginning" and not in the organic chemistry section

I'm of the opinion he should post in Beginnings regardless because he has no references, and is clearly not yet capable of further synthesis towards a grey market/research chemical target product.

AvBaeyer - 3-2-2015 at 19:59

"a mild oxidising agent like bleach cannot be used as the ketone is a methyl ketone so haloform reaction will take place and you will end up with chloroform"

Secondary alcohols oxidize to ketones in high yields with sodium hypochlorite under acidic conditions. See RV Stevens, et al., J. Org. Chem., Vol. 45, No. 10, 1980, 2030 and references cited therein. Thus, the Gignard reaction with propylene oxide followed by oxidation (acidic hypochlorite or alternatives) would provide the desired ketone. Thiophene will be stable to most oxidants.

AvB

CuReUS - 4-2-2015 at 00:02

actually,I am not well versed with sulphur chemistry
do oxidising agents like KMnO4,chromtes etc oxidise S to sulphoxides and sulphones ?
The only oxidising agent that I know of which does that is H2O2
Quote:
There are plenty of other options, though. (some available to the home chemist, some not) One that's mild and selective towards secondary alcohols would be preferable

could you tell some ? The only ones that came to my mind was the oppenauer oxidation,lead tetracetate(but this might methylate thiopene),lead nitrate(not sure about this one,but I read that it was an alternative to hexamine for the sommlet reaction),ferric ferrocyanide(from printer ink,I am not sure about this one too:( )
Quote: Originally posted by AvBaeyer  

Secondary alcohols oxidize to ketones in high yields with sodium hypochlorite under acidic conditions. See RV Stevens, et al., J. Org. Chem., Vol. 45, No. 10, 1980, 2030 and references cited therein.

and you please see this
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haloform_reaction
Quote:
Thus, the Gignard reaction with propylene oxide followed by oxidation (acidic hypochlorite or alternatives) would provide the desired ketone. Thiophene will be stable to most oxidants.

acidic ? I thought hypochorites were always used in alkaline medium:o

[Edited on 4-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Darkstar - 4-2-2015 at 00:40

The haloform reaction only occurs under basic conditions. AvBaeyer is correct about secondary alcohol-to-ketone oxidations using sodium hypochlorite/hypochlorous acid. Such oxidations are usually carried out in GAA.

CuReUS - 4-2-2015 at 00:49

in the acetaldehyde thread,one member had given the idea of using bleach on ethanol to make acetaldehyde but another member had warned him about the haloform reaction and also said that hypochlorites could only be used in alkaline medium
then bleach is a good choice for the oxidation:)
but what are the other potential oxidising agents ?

[Edited on 4-2-2015 by CuReUS]

DJF90 - 4-2-2015 at 00:52

Do your own book work Cureus, a good undergraduate text will provide you with a plethora of options.

Darkstar - 4-2-2015 at 01:07

Here are a few off the top of my head to get you started:

Chromium trioxide (Jones oxidation)
Dichromates
Permanganates
Manganese dioxide
PCC
DMP
Oxalyl chloride/DMSO (Swern oxidation)
Aluminium isopropoxide/acetone (Oppenauer oxidation)
H2O2 (with phase-transfer catalyst)

This list is by no means exhaustive. There are many, many more potential oxidizing agents/methods out there. ;)

AvBaeyer - 4-2-2015 at 20:24

CuReUs

Here is the Stevens paper. Read it and absorb!

AvB

Attachment: ketones via hyypochlorite_stevens_JOC_1980[1].pdf (461kB)
This file has been downloaded 449 times


CuReUS - 5-2-2015 at 02:00

Quote: Originally posted by Darkstar  
Here are a few off the top of my head to get you started:

Chromium trioxide (Jones oxidation)
Dichromates
Permanganates
Manganese dioxide
PCC
DMP
Oxalyl chloride/DMSO (Swern oxidation)
Aluminium isopropoxide/acetone (Oppenauer oxidation)
H2O2 (with phase-transfer catalyst)

This list is by no means exhaustive. There are many, many more potential oxidizing agents/methods out there. ;)

thank you,but these are the standard oxidising agents.No one nowadays wants to work with chromium because its too toxic,permaganate had been put on the schedule 2 list,MnO2 is generally suitable for allylic and benzylic hydroxyl groups and thiopenyl propan-2-ol is neither.even then the yield is not good(see the benzaldehyde thread)
PCC,PDC,DMP etc are the home chemist's elusive dreams and the H2O2/HCOOH method creates a mess:(
if you ask me,the only one I see that can be used by a home chemist is the swern oxidation,but even then working with oxalyl chloride might be dangerous,and if you try to make oxalyl chloride at home,you must keep in mind that one of the side products is phosgene:(
that's why I suggested using bleach because its cheap,gived high yield and is easily available
I was looking for out-of-the-box oxidising methods,that some members here know of.
DFJ90 wrongly assumed that I wanted to be spoonfed:(
Quote:
Here is the Stevens paper. Read it and absorb!

beautiful.:o I think chemistry will never fail to surprise me;)

[Edited on 5-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Chemosynthesis - 5-2-2015 at 02:12

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  
DMP etc are the home chemist's elusive dreams

DMP might be closer to hobbyist use than you think. IBX has been done: https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=12...

CuReUS - 5-2-2015 at 02:32

Quote: Originally posted by Chemosynthesis  

DMP might be closer to hobbyist use than you think. IBX has been done: https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=12...

well I will eat my....pipette:D Ok I give up;)
this is what I was looking for,exotic but easily obtainable if you know how
Now you have my mouth watering:D

[Edited on 5-2-2015 by CuReUS]

DJF90 - 5-2-2015 at 08:05

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

but what are the other potential oxidising agents ?


I answered appropriately for the question that was asked. You made no mention of wanting esoteric or exotic reagents for the desired transformation.

You also mention that a Swern oxidation is probably the ideal for amateur chemists but you seem naïve of the fact that it is typically a cryogenic reaction (at -78 *C) and whilst the reagents may be accessible by some means, the cooling is required to moderate the reaction between oxalyl chloride and DMSO.

I also would not use DMP as a "routine" reagent for the oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes or ketones, as it is too expensive and relatively difficult/time consuming to make (particularly as an amateur).

You make a comment about not wanting to use potassium dichromate because it is toxic then you go on to say that PCC/PDC would be an elusive dream from the amateur chemist. You may (or may not, depending on how you feel about hexavalent chromium) find the attached paper of interest.

I also stand by my previous comment - I've attached a fairly detailed e-book on alcohol oxidation for you to get started on. Perhaps you should read some more real chemistry rather than "how to cook meth" books.

Attachment: Potassium chlorochromate on solid support.pdf (530kB)
This file has been downloaded 538 times

Attachment: Oxidation Of Alcohols To Aldehydes And Ketones.pdf (2.7MB)
This file has been downloaded 14982 times


CuReUS - 5-2-2015 at 09:50

Quote: Originally posted by DJF90  
Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

but what are the other potential oxidising agents ?

You also mention that a Swern oxidation is probably the ideal for amateur chemists but you seem naïve of the fact that it is typically a cryogenic reaction (at -78 *C) and whilst the reagents may be accessible by some means, the cooling is required to moderate the reaction between oxalyl chloride and DMSO

come on man,maintaining such a low temperature is not that hard.cooks have been doing it all the time using dry ice/acetone to liquify NH3 for the birch reduction before the shake-n-bake method was invented.I later learnt that the swern oxidation releases CO and dimethyl sulphide and both are toxic gases
Quote:
I also would not use DMP as a "routine" reagent for the oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes or ketones, as it is too expensive and relatively difficult/time consuming to make (particularly as an amateur)

although I was impressed by chemo's post on IBX,I noted the fact that anthranilic acid was used as the starting chemical for iodobenzoic acid

Quote:
You make a comment about not wanting to use potassium dichromate because it is toxic then you go on to say that PCC/PDC would be an elusive dream from the amateur chemist

yes,PCC/PDC are dangerous without a doubt,but their pros outweigh the cons.then I can say that even diazomethane is dangerous.Does that mean people don't use it.Anyways I am never a supporter of these selective reagents.I prefer OTC ones.Also how many home chemists have been able to get their hands on some PDC first to be able to worry about its toxicity:D
Quote:
I also stand by my previous comment - I've attached a fairly detailed e-book on alcohol oxidation for you to get started on. Perhaps you should read some more real chemistry rather than "how to cook meth" books.

I have read that book,and many others.I think you should stop classifying books by name and see what is inside them first.Incase you haven't noticed,most of the reactions given in textbooks are impractical(phenol to benzene using Zn dust) and the reagents are expensive too(PCC,PDC).Cookbooks on the other hand use OTC chemicals and equipments.
Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

The only ones that came to my mind was the oppenauer oxidation,lead tetracetate(but this might methylate thiopene),lead nitrate(not sure about this one,but I read that it was an alternative to hexamine for the sommlet reaction),potassium ferricyanide(I am not sure about this one too)

I was wrong about the lead tetraacetate.It will only methylate if you boil the substrate with Pb(OAc)4 in the presence of GAA .At room temp it will oxidise alcohols to aldehydes and ketones]

[Edited on 6-2-2015 by CuReUS]

DJF90 - 9-2-2015 at 00:11

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

come on man,maintaining such a low temperature is not that hard.cooks have been doing it all the time using dry ice/acetone to liquify NH3 for the birch reduction before the shake-n-bake method was invented.I later learnt that the swern oxidation releases CO and dimethyl sulphide and both are toxic gases


Dry ice is not available OTC in many locales, and as such many amatuers have a hard time getting hold of it. I was under the impression that many cooks stole their anhydrous ammonia from farm tanks, where it is readily dispensed in a liquid state. Dimethyl sulfide is a volatile liquid by the way, not a gas. Its not too toxic but it does stink alot. I've done a Parikh Doering oxidation several times on 1 kg scale, and although the reaction was complete in several hours, it was a couple days work to perform the isolation. The odour of dimethylsulfide was still noticeable after four more synthetic stages, despite drying in a vac oven and chromatographic purification of the final product.

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

yes,PCC/PDC are dangerous without a doubt,but their pros outweigh the cons.then I can say that even diazomethane is dangerous.Does that mean people don't use it.Anyways I am never a supporter of these selective reagents.I prefer OTC ones.Also how many home chemists have been able to get their hands on some PDC first to be able to worry about its toxicity:D


I agree that many may consider PCC/PDC out of reach, but I suspect the need for pyridine is what causes the difficulty. Other members have demonstrated the preparation of pyridine from nicotinic acid, and whilst it may be cumbersome to produce several hundred grams, it would be satisfactory for preparation of a few grams of the chromate reagents. This is reasonable for research purposes.

Whilst OTC materials are preferable, the selectivity/ability provided by some reagents justifies the efforts required to prepare them in-house (excuse the pun). When working with relatively complex molecules, these reagents become a necessity rather than a luxury.

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I have read that book,and many others.


Oh you did, did you? Perhaps you didn't have the perseverence to reach pp. 341-342 where the Stevens oxidation is detailed, along with a preparative method. If you had read the book as you claim, AvBaeyer's post would not have been so suprising.

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I think you should stop classifying books by name and see what is inside them first.Incase you haven't noticed,most of the reactions given in textbooks are impractical(phenol to benzene using Zn dust) and the reagents are expensive too(PCC,PDC).Cookbooks on the other hand use OTC chemicals and equipments.


Selective reagents are expensive, but they're intended for research purposes where you aren't often using grams at a time. Again, OTC is a very location (and circumstance) specific term, and what is freely available for some may be heavily restricted for many.

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

I was wrong about the lead tetraacetate.It will only methylate if you boil the substrate with Pb(OAc)4 in the presence of GAA .At room temp it will oxidise alcohols to aldehydes and ketones


What does it matter? Lead tetraacetate is not a reagent you should recourse to without good reason. It is not OTC and suffers hydrolysis in storage. On top of that, its pretty toxic, certainly for something like the OPs question which could be done under the Stevens conditions using benign reagents.

[Edited on 9-2-2015 by DJF90]

CuReUS - 9-2-2015 at 02:19

Quote: Originally posted by DJF90  

Dry ice is not available OTC in many locales, and as such many amatuers have a hard time getting hold of it.

don't you get it in walmart.Otherwise just ask the counter guy at dippin dots or ben and jerry's the next time you go there.;)
Quote:
I was under the impression that many cooks stole their anhydrous ammonia from farm tanks, where it is readily dispensed in a liquid state.

https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/birch.mrcle...
Quote:
]Lead tetraacetate is not a reagent you should recourse to without good reason. It is not OTC

https://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/lead.tetraa...
I was searching for OTC sources of red lead and this is what I found
http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=53527#...

DJF90 - 9-2-2015 at 05:07

As I said before, availability of dry ice depends on location. There is no OTC source here in the UK, but it can be ordered online at a relatively high price. If you can get it at any supermarket in the states, then good for you. However I try to consider that everyone may not have the same potential resources as myself.

It would be several steps to produce PCC/PDC but you'd benefit from several intermediates which have additional uses. Everything needed has been documented on this forum at some point or another, but not necessarily tied together. There are alternative reagents/conditions as outlined in the book I provided. Some will be easier to make use of than others.

Mailinmypocket - 9-2-2015 at 05:25

I find it interesting how dry ice is sold in so many places in the USA. Here in Canada I need to go to places like Air Liquide or Praxair (they have store fronts) but the dry ice is pretty pricey.

Loptr - 9-2-2015 at 06:40

Quote: Originally posted by Mailinmypocket  
I find it interesting how dry ice is sold in so many places in the USA. Here in Canada I need to go to places like Air Liquide or Praxair (they have store fronts) but the dry ice is pretty pricey.


There is a fish market about right around the corner from my house where I can purchase dry ice, not to mention the grocery store, which is pretty much right behind my house.

[Edited on 9-2-2015 by Loptr]

CuReUS - 10-2-2015 at 05:47

what about using fenton's reagent to oxidise the secondary alcohol ? is fenton's reagent more stronger than just H2O2 ?
Quote: Originally posted by turd  

Thiophene is more electron rich so you might have to do some optimization.

Even I was worrying about this.the acetylacetone method might be the only way to make the ketone,the B-keto ester method may not work,the ring being too electron rich for the methylene carbon to attack it:(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetoacetic_ester_synthesis#med...

DJF90 - 10-2-2015 at 06:41

Fenton's reagent is aggressive and best saved for cleaning glassware/disposing of waste organics (BromicAcid has used it for this).

I see two potential routes to the desired compound (without thinking hard about it):
1) Metallation of thiophene and alkylation with propylene oxide. This should give the alcohol, which can be oxidised up using any suitable reagent (see the book I posted before).

2) Knoevanagel condensation of thiophene-2-carboxaldehyde with nitroethane to obtain the nitroalkene, which may be treated with Fe/HCl to afford the ketone. I'm aware of a similar transformation to obtain 1-naphthylacetone in the literature.

EDIT: Just realised route #1 was already suggested by Darkstar. Sorry about that.

[Edited on 10-2-2015 by DJF90]

CuReUS - 10-2-2015 at 21:29

Quote:
Fenton's reagent is aggressive and best saved for cleaning glassware/disposing of waste organics

DFJ90,although I respect you a lot,I feel that is a very wrong thing to say.Its like saying petroleum should be only used as fuel and not for anything else
Quote:
1) Metallation of thiophene and alkylation with propylene oxide. This should give the alcohol, which can be oxidised up using any suitable reagent.

what about this?
Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  
to make allylthiopene,treat 2-iodothiopene with Mg to make a grignard reagent and then react it with allylbromide to get allylthiopene
then do wacker oxidation to get your ketone
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wacker_process#Wacker.E2.80.93T...

allyl bromide is cheaper than propylene oxide and for the wacker,you will need ~1g of PdCl2 and it can be reused again.
Quote:
2) Knoevanagel condensation of thiophene-2-carboxaldehyde with nitroethane to obtain the nitroalkene, which may be treated with Fe/HCl to afford the ketone

this route is not helpful as the OP's starting compound is 2-iodothiophene

[Edited on 11-2-2015 by CuReUS]

DJF90 - 11-2-2015 at 00:08

Sure, Fenton's reagent probably has some synthetic use, but I've never seen anything just browsing the literature. Because it is reliant on he generation of *OH radicals anongside Fe(IV), it is a very aggresive oxidant as I mentioned.

Propylene oxide can be made from propylene glycol, which is piss cheap. Sure, it adds another step, but allyl bromide isn't exactly OTC either and would require two reactions to prepare.

As for thiophene-2-carboxaldehyde, it can be made via metallation (e.g. grignard formation) and reaction with DMF or N-methylformanilide (Bouveault aldehyde synthesis).

CuReUS - 15-2-2015 at 06:25

Quote: Originally posted by DJF90  
Sure, Fenton's reagent probably has some synthetic use, but I've never seen anything just browsing the literature.

I am attaching some files ,enjoy;)
Quote: Originally posted by DJF90  

Propylene oxide can be made from propylene glycol, which is piss cheap.

how ?
Quote:
As for thiophene-2-carboxaldehyde, it can be made via metallation (e.g. grignard formation) and reaction with DMF or N-methylformanilide (Bouveault aldehyde synthesis).

now that's a beautiful reaction:)

but I think I have found a good reaction.No need of even iodothiopene,plain thiopene might work.this chemical is needed
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganese%28III%29_acetate
here is an electrochemical prep,from here
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hlca.201100105/ab...
Quote:
Electrochemical Preparation of Mn(OAc)3
Mn(OAc)3 ·2H2O was obtained in an optimized bipolar
packed-bed reactor by the electrochemical method described in [14]. However, to obtain Mn(OAc)3, this reactor was modified to a semi-pilot scale. Therefore, a reactor consisting of a glass tube (inner diameter,52 mm) having 40 rows of graphite rings inside was designed. Each horizontal row in the reactor had seven graphite rings which were 14 mm long, 16 mm in outer diameter, and 10 mm in inner diameter.
Each horizontal row was insulated from each other by placing a Teflon net with 1-mm thickness between the rows. Applying a potential to the reactor through two graphite rods, 10 cm in lenght and 6 mm in diameter, placed top and bottom of the reactor, Mn(OAc)2was oxidized to Mn(OAc)3by electrolysis.

For this, a soln. containing 100 mm Mn(OAc)2 and 400 mm AcONa was prepared from 95% AcOH. During
applying 180 V cell potential supplied by 500 V/1A dc power unit to the reactor, this colorless soln. was added to the reactor continuously with a dosage pump with 2.5 l/h flow rate. The red-brown soln. collected from the bottom of the reactor was recycled through the reactor under the same condition. The obtained soln. was kept in a closed glass container for 3 – 4 d, until Mn(OAc)3 completely precipitated,
and the color of the soln. disappeared. The red-brown precipitate was filtered through a sintered funnel (diameter, 120 mm) with porosity 4 and washed with glacial AcOH (2X100 ml) and than Et2O (2X100 ml). The obtained solid was dried under vacuum in a desiccator containing P2O5 for one week.
Yield: 120 g (90%)

or see this
Quote:
"commercially available dihydrate is easily prepared by the reaction of manganese(II)acetate with KMnO4 in acetic acid at reflux.the anhydrous form is prepared in acetic acid and acetic anhydride"


EDIT:
I forgot to attach the real pdf itself.:mad: ,the one with the Mn(OAc)4 reaction.but I see now that ionic liquids will be needed for the reaction.Is TEMPO a substitute for ionic liquids ?

Attachment: alcohol.oxidation.iron-h2o2.pdf (258kB)
This file has been downloaded 466 times

Attachment: DCM(pg 5) as solvent for peroxide oxidation.pdf (785kB)
This file has been downloaded 459 times
Attachment: Hydrogen-Peroxide-as-an-Oxidant-for-Organic-Reactions (1).pdf (263kB)
This file has been downloaded 596 times



Attachment: snider2001.pdf (62kB)
This file has been downloaded 570 times

Attachment: taming the fenton reagent.pdf (2MB)
This file has been downloaded 563 times
Attachment: synthesis of arylacetones.pdf (56kB)
This file has been downloaded 452 times

[Edited on 16-2-2015 by CuReUS]

Darkstar - 15-2-2015 at 21:31

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

thank you,but these are the standard oxidising agents.


Like DJF90 already pointed out, you simply asked for "potential oxidizing agents." You made no specific mention about wanting a bunch of exotic or novel methods/reagents. Given the way the question was worded and your surprise when AvBaeyer claimed that secondary alcohols can be oxidized to ketones using hypochlorites under acidic conditions, I kind of got the impression that you weren't already familiar with the usual oxidizers. (which, admittedly, did seem a little strange, as many of your posts clearly demonstrate an understanding of chemistry more advanced than that of someone who would honestly need to ask)

Quote:

No one nowadays wants to work with chromium because its too toxic


You're telling me there's not a single person out there who's okay with using chromium oxidizers these days? Come on, man, it's hexavalent chromium, not dimethylmercury. It's not THAT toxic. Besides, when it comes to drug cooks -- and I stand by my assumption that the OP's question is cookery-related -- they usually seem far more concerned about whether or not the reagent actually works, and, if so, how easy it is to obtain. Toxicity rarely ever seems to be at the top of their list of concerns. If it were, they'd stop using aluminum amalgam for their imine and nitro group reductions since it involves toxic mercury(II) salts and generates elemental mercury waste.

Quote:

permaganate had been put on the schedule 2 list


Permanganates like KMnO4 and NaMnO4 are List II, not Schedule II. These are two very different lists from a legal standpoint (purchase, possession, manufacture etc). For example, acetic anhydride, acetone, KMnO4 and toluene are List II. Schedule II substances, however, are things like cocaine, d-methamphetamine, morphine, oxycodone and PCP, as well as precursors like phenylacetone and a couple for PCP. Compared to those substances, List II chemicals aren't even remotely "controlled" or difficult to obtain.

Quote:

MnO2 is generally suitable for allylic and benzylic hydroxyl groups and thiopenyl propan-2-ol is neither.


Activated MnO2 will oxidize saturated alcohols under neutral conditions. The reaction would take longer than with an allylic or benzylic alcohol, and the yields wouldn't be as great, but it would work.


Quote:

the H2O2/HCOOH method creates a mess


Who said anything about performic acid? If you tried to oxidize a secondary alcohol that way, you'd probably end up with an ester. Peroxy acids react with ketones via the Baeyer–Villiger oxidation.

What I was referring to is using aqueous H2O2 with a metal catalyst under phase-transfer conditions. This is one of the greenest, most environmentally-friendly oxidation methods there are. There's no mess, the work-up is extremely simple, the yields are very good, and the only byproduct is water.

Quote:

what about using fenton's reagent to oxidise the secondary alcohol ?


I haven't looked at all of the .pdf files you've attached yet (I've seen most of them judging by their titles anyway), but, as you probably know by now, Fenton’s reagent can indeed be used to oxidize secondary alcohols. With that said, if you haven't already done so, I highly recommend you look into Fe(III)-catalyzed H2O2 oxidations. FeBr3 seems to work well. The oxidations can be done under organic-solvent-free conditions at room temperature with high yields (like 90%+), and the reaction doesn't require a metal complex or phase-transfer catalyst. Check out that first .pdf you attached if you haven't already.




[Edited on 2-16-2015 by Darkstar]

CuReUS - 19-2-2015 at 03:31

Quote: Originally posted by CuReUS  

Quote:
As for thiophene-2-carboxaldehyde, it can be made via metallation (e.g. grignard formation) and reaction with DMF or N-methylformanilide (Bouveault aldehyde synthesis).

now that's a beautiful reaction:)

It did not strike my mind then,but coming to think of it now,thiopene-2-aldehyde can be made by refluxing with CHCl3 and NaOH
on a side note,how would you synthesize this compound



[Edited on 19-2-2015 by CuReUS]

molecule.bmp - 741kB

DJF90 - 19-2-2015 at 04:15

CuReUS, do us all a favour and get a decent structure drawing software. The free one of choice used to be ACD chemsketch, but more recently MarvinSketch by ChemAxon is in my experience much nicer to use. You can download the Marvin Beans software package at

http://www.chemaxon.com/download/marvin-suite/


CuReUS - 20-2-2015 at 03:22

I have the ACD chemsketch,but the problem is if I upload the file,other people will not be able to see it because the file format is different
anyways,the compound that I have drawn can be clearly understood,so try to create,not complain:P
Is thiopene electron rich enough for a duff reaction ?

sparkgap - 20-2-2015 at 04:25

Well, if you'd look carefully at your fine software, you'd see it has the capability to save chemical structures as *.gif, and *.png... in any event, you might be interested in US2543318.

sparky (~_~)

[Edited on 20-2-2015 by sparkgap]

CuReUS - 21-2-2015 at 00:08

Thanks for the patent,but I don't see much difference in that and doing a duff reaction
for the latter,you use hexamine which you make from NH3 and HCHO and for the former,you react HCHO with an ammonium salt along with thiopene
so we can safely conclude that duff reaction can be used to formylate thiopene
I found this website for drawing structures,and it generates the image source code immediately,which can be copy-pasted here.The only problem is that the image formed is messed up:( .Does anyone know why ?so my compound appears like this(its an alpha-halo ketone)

http://www.webqc.org/moleculareditor.php

[Edited on 21-2-2015 by CuReUS]