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Author: Subject: Friedel Crafts acylation
essbee
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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 04:16
Friedel Crafts acylation


How effective is anhydrous zinc chloride as a FC condensing agent? Everyone seems to use AlCl3, but the literature says many other chlorides may also be used.

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TheChemiKid
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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 04:55


IIRC, a paper stated that AlCl3.0H2O was the best catalyst, and after that was ZnCl2.0H2O
I cannot find the paper now, but if I find it I will upload it.




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Nicodem
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8-3-2014 at 04:58
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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 06:40


Quote: Originally posted by TheChemiKid  
IIRC, a paper stated that AlCl3.0H2O was the best catalyst, and after that was ZnCl2.0H2O
I cannot find the paper now, but if I find it I will upload it.


I'm no expert on FC but I think trying to frame an answer in terms 'better' and 'best' is probably nonsensical.

Various Lewis acids are likely to be more suitable for certain types of FC, others for other types. Generalising here won't do much good.

Perhaps your paper pertained to one specific reaction?




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TheChemiKid
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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 07:21


I think it was on the synthesis of Ethylbenzene.



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essbee
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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 15:20


I've determined that ZnCl2 is a 'good' catalyst for some FC acylations ( a whole day surfing.....) but the question now is, does zinc chloride immediately form a rather strong Lewis acid/Lewis base complex with the ketone function in the same way that AlCl3 does, basically does ZnCl2 have the advantage over AlCl3 in that it is not needed in stoichiometric+ amounts?

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[*] posted on 8-3-2014 at 19:29


If you haven't already done so you should take a look at Organic Reactions, Vol 3 (in the forum library) to aquaint yourself with the Friedel-Crafts reaction. The review is a bit dated but the fundamental information is still useful. Overall, the choice of catalyst depends on a variety of factors based on careful cosideration of the alkylating or acylating agent and the substrate as well as the solvent to be used. For example, under the right set of conditions, even something as mild as iodine can induce a Friedel-Crafts acylation [See, for example, JACS 70, 1647 (1948) and JACS 68, 2639 (1946)].

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essbee
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[*] posted on 9-3-2014 at 03:59



Yes, nothing useful in the library.

Anyone have references for the use of Zinc chloride?


[Edited on 9-3-2014 by essbee]
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[*] posted on 9-3-2014 at 06:34


Quote: Originally posted by essbee  

Yes, nothing useful in the library.

Anyone have references for the use of Zinc chloride?


[Edited on 9-3-2014 by essbee]


You could try some experiments and give us results.
I am not sure what you have in mind but if ZnCl2
is better than AlCl3 for some reactions
the information would be useful to the rest of us.
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[*] posted on 9-3-2014 at 08:00


There are seriously dozens if not hundreds of references for friedel crafts acylations using different lewis acids. It's substrate dependent... Being more specific would yield better results more than likely. AlCl3 is typically considered a 'stronger' lewis acid. Even bismuth oxychloride has been used. Amongst dozens of others; silica sulfuric acid, FeCl3, TeCl4, triflates, catalysts neat, catalysts in ionic liquids, etc... Each one can be advantageous depending on the substrate, target, and desired 'process' (perhaps a deplorable word for amateur science). It sounds like you are thinking in terms of green chemical principles? In which case bismuth oxychloride and derivatives thereof sound promising to me, unless something new has popped out recently.



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essbee
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[*] posted on 9-3-2014 at 08:04


Yes indeed....I will have a try, my ZnCl2 was anhydrous when I bought it............... some time ago, so I will get some fresh stuff and see if it is effective in an few FC experiments.
My lack of info is generally regarding workup, I am hoping for a 'simple' one like that of FeCl3 ( no black goo etc. ), so I guess that is the real quest of my trials.
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