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Alkylation

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Typical route for alkylation of benzene with ethylene and ZSM-5 as a heterogeneous catalyst

Alkylation is a chemical reaction that entails transfer of an alkyl group. The alkyl group may be transferred as an alkyl carbocation, a free radical, a carbanion, or a carbene (or their equivalents).[1][2] Alkylating agents are reagents for effecting alkylation. Alkyl groups can also be removed in a process known as dealkylation. Alkylating agents are often classified according to their nucleophilic or electrophilic character. In oil refining contexts, alkylation refers to a particular alkylation of isobutane with olefins. For upgrading of petroleum, alkylation produces a premium blending stock for gasoline.[3] In medicine, alkylation of DNA is used in chemotherapy to damage the DNA of cancer cells. Alkylation is accomplished with the class of drugs called alkylating antineoplastic agents.

Nucleophilic alkylating agents

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Nucleophilic alkylating agents deliver the equivalent of an alkyl anion (carbanion). The formal "alkyl anion" attacks an electrophile, forming a new covalent bond between the alkyl group and the electrophile. The counterion, which is a cation such as lithium, can be removed and washed away in the work-up. Examples include the use of organometallic compounds such as Grignard (organomagnesium), organolithium, organocopper, and organosodium reagents. These compounds typically can add to an electron-deficient carbon atom such as at a carbonyl group. Nucleophilic alkylating agents can displace halide substituents on a carbon atom through the SN2 mechanism. With a catalyst, they also alkylate alkyl and aryl halides, as exemplified by Suzuki couplings.

The Kumada coupling employs both a nucleophilic alkylation step subsequent to the oxidative addition of the aryl halide (L = Ligand, Ar = Aryl). The starting material, an aryl bromide (Ar-Br) reacts with nickel with ligands (NiL2). Then, a Grignard reagent (R-MgBr) alkylates the nickel center, replacing the bromide ligand (Br) with an alkyl ligand (R). This nickel-aryl-alkyl complex undergoes rearrangement and reductive elimination to expel an alkylated aryl (Ar-R). The outcome of this reaction is that the aryl group (Ar) is alkylated with an alkyl group (R), replacing bromide (Br), creating an alkylated aryl (Ar-R), the intended product. The bromide is expelled as magnesium bromide (MgBr2). Nickel with ligands (NiL2) acts as the catalyst, being reused multiple times.

The SN2 mechanism is not available for aryl substituents, where the trajectory to attack the carbon atom would be inside the ring. Thus, only reactions catalyzed by organometallic catalysts are possible.[citation needed]

Alkylation by carbon electrophiles

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C-alkylation

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C-alkylation is a process for the formation of carbon-carbon bonds. The largest example of this takes place in the alkylation units of petrochemical plants, which convert low-molecular-weight alkenes into high octane gasoline components. Electron-rich species such as phenols are also commonly alkylated to produce a variety of products; examples include linear alkylbenzenes used in the production of surfactants like LAS, or butylated phenols like BHT, which are used as antioxidants. This can be achieved using either acid catalysts like Amberlyst, or Lewis acids like aluminium.[4] On a laboratory scale the Friedel–Crafts reaction uses alkyl halides, as these are often easier to handle than their corresponding alkenes, which tend to be gasses. The reaction is catalysed by aluminium trichloride. This approach is rarely used industrially as alkyl halides are more expensive than alkenes.[citation needed]

N-,P-, S- alkylation

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N-, P-, and S-alkylation are important processes for the formation of carbon-nitrogen, carbon-phosphorus, and carbon-sulfur bonds,[citation needed]

Amines are readily alkylated. The rate of alkylation follows the order tertiary amine < secondary amine < primary amine. Typical alkylating agents are alkyl halides. Industry often relies on green chemistry methods involving alkylation of amines with alcohols, the byproduct being water. Hydroamination is another green method for N-alkylation.[citation needed]

In the Menshutkin reaction, a tertiary amine is converted into a quaternary ammonium salt by reaction with an alkyl halide. Similar reactions occur when tertiary phosphines are treated with alkyl halides, the products being phosphonium salts.

Menshutkin-reaction
Menshutkin-reaction

Thiols are readily alkylated to give thioethers via the thiol-ene reaction.[5] The reaction is typically conducted in the presence of a base or using the conjugate base of the thiol. Thioethers undergo alkylation to give sulfonium ions.

O-alkylation

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Alcohols alkylate to give ethers:

When the alkylating agent is an alkyl halide, the conversion is called the Williamson ether synthesis. Alcohols are also good alkylating agents in the presence of suitable acid catalysts. For example, most methyl amines are prepared by alkylation of ammonia with methanol. The alkylation of phenols is particularly straightforward since it is subject to fewer competing reactions.[6]

(with Na+ as a spectator ion)

More complex alkylation of a alcohols and phenols involve ethoxylation. Ethylene oxide is the alkylating group in this reaction.

Oxidative addition to metals

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In the process called oxidative addition, low-valent metals often react with alkylating agents to give metal alkyls. This reaction is one step in the Cativa process for the synthesis of acetic acid from methyl iodide. Many cross coupling reactions proceed via oxidative addition as well.[citation needed]

Electrophilic alkylating agents

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Triethyloxonium tetrafluoroborate is one of the most electrophilic alkylating agents.[7]

Electrophilic alkylating agents deliver the equivalent of an alkyl cation. Alkyl halides are typical alkylating agents. Trimethyloxonium tetrafluoroborate and triethyloxonium tetrafluoroborate are particularly strong electrophiles due to their overt positive charge and an inert leaving group (dimethyl or diethyl ether). Dimethyl sulfate is intermediate in electrophilicity.[citation needed]

Methylation with diazomethane

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Diazomethane is a popular methylating agent in the laboratory, but it is too hazardous (explosive gas with a high acute toxicity) to be employed on an industrial scale without special precautions.[8] Use of diazomethane has been significantly reduced by the introduction of the safer and equivalent reagent trimethylsilyldiazomethane.[9]

Hazards

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Electrophilic, soluble alkylating agents are often toxic and carcinogenic, due to their tendency to alkylate DNA. This mechanism of toxicity is relevant to the function of anti-cancer drugs in the form of alkylating antineoplastic agents. Some chemical weapons such as mustard gas (sulfide of dichloroethyl) function as alkylating agents. Alkylated DNA either does not coil or uncoil properly, or cannot be processed by information-decoding enzymes.[citation needed] Without functional DNA, the functioning of the cell ceases, leading to cell death. Thus, these alkylating agents are cytotoxic.

Catalysts

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Friedel-Crafts alkylation of benzene is often catalyzed by aluminium trichloride.

Electrophilic alkylation uses Lewis acids and Brønsted acids, sometimes both. Classically, Lewis acids, e.g., aluminium trichloride, are employed when the alkyl halide are used. Brønsted acids are used when alkylating with olefins. Typical catalysts are zeolites, i.e. solid acid catalysts, and sulfuric acid. Silicotungstic acid is used to manufacture ethyl acetate by the alkylation of acetic acid by ethylene:[10]

In biology

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Alkylation in biology causes DNA damage. It is the transfer of alkyl groups to the nitrogenous bases. It is caused by alkylating agents such as EMS (Ethyl methanesulfonate). Bifunctional alkyl groups which have two alkyl groups in them cause cross linking in DNA. Alkylation damaged ring nitrogen bases are repaired via the base excision repair (BER) pathway.[11]

The SN2-like methyl transfer reaction in DNA methylation. Only the SAM cofactor and cytosine base are shown for simplicity.

Commodity chemicals

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Several commodity chemicals are produced by alkylation. Included are several fundamental benzene-based feedstocks such as ethylbenzene (precursor to styrene), cumene (precursor to phenol and acetone), linear alkylbenzene sulfonates (for detergents).[12]

Sodium dodecylbenzene, obtained by alkylation of benzene with dodecene, is a precursor to linear alkylbenzene sulfonate detergents.

Gasoline production

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Typical acid-catalyzed route to 2,4-dimethylpentane.

In a conventional oil refinery, isobutane is alkylated with low-molecular-weight alkenes (primarily a mixture of propene and butene) in the presence of a Brønsted acid catalyst, which can include solid acids (zeolites). The catalyst protonates the alkenes (propene, butene) to produce carbocations, which alkylate isobutane. The product, called "alkylate", is composed of a mixture of high-octane, branched-chain paraffinic hydrocarbons (mostly isoheptane and isooctane). Alkylate is a premium gasoline blending stock because it has exceptional antiknock properties and is clean burning. Alkylate is also a key component of avgas. By combining fluid catalytic cracking, polymerization, and alkylation, refineries can obtain a gasoline yield of 70 percent. The widespread use of sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid in refineries poses significant environmental risks.[13] Ionic liquids are used in place of the older generation of strong Bronsted acids.[14][15]

Dealkylation

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Complementing alkylation reactions are the reverse, dealkylations. Prevalent are demethylations, which are prevalent in biology, organic synthesis, and other areas, especially for methyl ethers and methyl amines.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Alkylation is a reaction or reaction sequence that introduces one or more alkyl groups into a molecule by replacing hydrogen atoms or lone pairs with alkyl groups.[1] In organic synthesis, alkylation enables the construction of complex carbon skeletons and is exemplified by the Friedel-Crafts alkylation, in which an aromatic ring reacts with an alkyl halide under Lewis acid catalysis, such as aluminum chloride, to form a new carbon-carbon bond between the aromatic and alkyl groups. This method is widely used despite challenges like polyalkylation due to the activating nature of alkyl substituents.[2] Beyond synthesis, alkylation plays a vital role in industrial processes, particularly in petroleum refining, where it converts low-value feedstocks into valuable products.[3] The industrial alkylation process combines isobutane, a light iso-paraffin, with C3–C4 olefins like propylene or butylene in the presence of strong acid catalysts, such as sulfuric acid or hydrofluoric acid, to yield alkylate—a mixture of branched, high-octane hydrocarbons essential for gasoline blending. Recent developments include efforts to phase out hydrofluoric acid catalysts due to safety concerns, favoring safer alternatives like solid acids.[3][4] This reaction enhances fuel quality by increasing octane ratings and reducing volatility, with U.S. refinery alkylate production capacity exceeding 1.3 million barrels per stream day as of 2024 to support clean fuel standards.[5] In biochemistry, alkylation describes the covalent attachment of alkyl groups to DNA bases, forming adducts that distort the DNA helix and impede replication or transcription, often leading to mutations or apoptosis.[6] Such damage arises from endogenous sources like S-adenosylmethionine or exogenous alkylating agents, and cells repair it via mechanisms including base excision repair and O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase.[6] This property is harnessed in cancer chemotherapy, where drugs like temozolomide introduce alkyl lesions to selectively kill rapidly dividing tumor cells, though repair efficiency can influence treatment outcomes.[6]

Fundamentals

Definition and Scope

Alkylation is a chemical reaction involving the transfer of an alkyl group from an alkylating agent to a substrate molecule, thereby forming a new carbon-carbon, carbon-nitrogen, carbon-oxygen, or similar bond.[7] This process introduces an alkyl substituent into an organic compound, often through substitution or addition mechanisms.[8] Unlike arylation, which transfers an aryl group (e.g., phenyl), or acylation, which attaches an acyl group (R-C=O), alkylation specifically involves saturated hydrocarbon chains derived from alkanes.[8] The scope of alkylation encompasses both synthetic applications in organic chemistry, where it is used to build complex molecular frameworks, and natural processes in biological systems.[9] In synthesis, it serves as a fundamental tool for carbon chain extension, while in biology, it can modify biomolecules like DNA, influencing processes such as replication and repair. Key prerequisites include the nature of the alkylating agent, typically an alkyl halide (R-X), and the substrate acting as a nucleophile (Nu:), often proceeding via SN1 or SN2 pathways as introductory examples of reactivity.[10] Alkyl groups (R-) are classified as primary (1°), secondary (2°), or tertiary (3°) based on the number of carbon atoms attached to the carbon bearing the functional group or point of attachment: primary alkyl groups have one such carbon, secondary have two, and tertiary have three. Examples include methyl (CH₃-), ethyl (CH₃CH₂-), and isopropyl ((CH₃)₂CH-) groups. Reactivity trends vary by mechanism; primary alkyl halides favor SN2 reactions due to low steric hindrance, while tertiary ones prefer SN1 pathways owing to stable carbocation intermediates.[10] A general reaction scheme for alkylation via nucleophilic substitution is represented as:
RX+NuRNu+X \mathrm{R-X + Nu^{-} \rightarrow R-Nu + X^{-}}
where R-X is the alkyl halide, Nu⁻ is the nucleophile, and X⁻ is the leaving group (e.g., halide ion).[10] This scheme highlights the bond-forming step central to alkylation.[7]

Historical Development

The foundations of alkylation reactions were laid in the mid-19th century through pioneering work on alkyl halides and their reactivity. In the 1840s, German chemist Hermann Kolbe developed methods for synthesizing alkyl nitriles by reacting alkyl iodides with potassium cyanide, marking one of the earliest systematic uses of alkyl halides to introduce alkyl groups into molecules.[11] Concurrently, in 1849, British chemist Edward Frankland synthesized diethylzinc from ethyl iodide and zinc, providing the first organometallic compounds capable of transferring alkyl groups in synthetic transformations.[12] These efforts by Kolbe, Frankland, and contemporaries like Charles Adolphe Wurtz—who introduced the Wurtz coupling of alkyl halides with sodium in 1855—established alkyl halides as key reagents in organic synthesis, shifting focus from empirical observations to controlled carbon-carbon bond formations.[12] A major milestone came in 1877 with the introduction of the Friedel-Crafts alkylation by French chemist Charles Friedel and American chemist James Crafts, who demonstrated that alkyl halides, in the presence of Lewis acids like aluminum chloride, could alkylate aromatic rings to produce alkylbenzenes. This reaction revolutionized aromatic chemistry by enabling direct substitution on benzene derivatives, expanding the toolkit for building complex organic structures. The method's versatility quickly made it a cornerstone of synthetic organic chemistry, influencing subsequent developments in both laboratory and industrial applications. The advent of the 20th century brought further innovations, notably Victor Grignard's discovery in 1900 of organomagnesium reagents (Grignard reagents) from alkyl halides and magnesium, which facilitated nucleophilic alkylation at carbonyl groups and other electrophilic sites.[13] Grignard's work earned him the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1912, shared with Paul Sabatier, underscoring its transformative impact on carbon-carbon bond formation.[14] In the 1930s, industrial alkylation processes emerged in petroleum refining, where olefins were alkylated with isobutane using acid catalysts to produce high-octane gasoline components, driven by the demand for aviation fuel. This application scaled alkylation from academic curiosity to a critical petrochemical process.[15] The 1940s highlighted alkylation's biological relevance when mustard gas (sulfur mustard), a chemical warfare agent from World War I, was recognized as a potent alkylating agent that cross-links DNA, leading to its investigation for anticancer properties and the development of nitrogen mustard derivatives as early chemotherapeutics.[16] Post-1950s, alkylation evolved toward more efficient catalytic methods, including solid acid catalysts and transition metal systems, which improved selectivity and reduced waste in both synthetic and industrial contexts, reflecting broader advances in catalysis.[17]

Reaction Mechanisms

Electrophilic Alkylation

Electrophilic alkylation involves the transfer of an alkyl group from an electrophilic alkylating agent, such as an alkyl halide (R-X) or an alkyloxonium ion (R₃O⁺), to a nucleophilic substrate. The reaction proceeds via nucleophilic substitution mechanisms where the nucleophile attacks the electrophilic carbon of the alkyl group. Common alkylating agents generate either a carbocation intermediate or undergo direct displacement, with the rate-determining step typically being carbocation formation in unimolecular pathways or the backside attack in bimolecular pathways.[18][19] The primary mechanisms are SN1 and SN2. In SN1 reactions, favored for tertiary alkyl halides in polar protic solvents, the leaving group departs first to form a planar carbocation intermediate, followed by nucleophilic attack from either side, often leading to racemization. SN2 reactions, preferred for primary alkyl halides with strong nucleophiles in polar aprotic solvents, involve concerted backside attack by the nucleophile, displacing the leaving group in a single step and resulting in inversion of configuration. Both mechanisms can compete with elimination side reactions (E1 for SN1 conditions and E2 for SN2), particularly under basic conditions or with bulky substrates, yielding alkenes instead of substitution products.[18][20][19] Representative examples include the alkylation of amines with alkyl halides, where primary amines react via SN2 to form secondary amines, as in the reaction of ammonia with methyl iodide to produce methylamine. Enolates also undergo electrophilic alkylation, typically via SN2 with primary alkyl halides, to introduce alkyl groups at the alpha position of carbonyl compounds; for instance, the enolate of acetone reacts with ethyl bromide to yield 2-butanone. A classic SN2 equation is:
CHX3I+OHXCHX3OH+IX \ce{CH3I + OH- -> CH3OH + I-}
This illustrates the direct displacement mechanism with a primary methyl electrophile and hydroxide nucleophile.[21][22] Stereochemistry is a key distinguishing feature: SN2 proceeds with complete inversion due to the back-side attack, preserving the stereospecificity for chiral centers, while SN1 leads to partial or complete racemization because of the achiral carbocation intermediate. Factors influencing the mechanism include steric hindrance (SN2 disfavored by tertiary substrates due to crowding at the reaction center), solvent polarity (protic solvents stabilize ions for SN1, aprotic solvents enhance nucleophile strength for SN2), and leaving group ability (iodide > bromide > chloride, with tosylate also effective). These elements determine selectivity and yield in synthetic applications.[20][18][19]

Nucleophilic Alkylation

Nucleophilic alkylation involves the transfer of an alkyl group from a nucleophilic alkylating agent to an electrophilic center, typically through the action of organometallic reagents such as Grignard reagents (RMgX) or organolithium compounds (RLi), which behave as carbanions due to the polarizing effect of the metal. These reagents are highly nucleophilic and react with electrophiles like carbonyl compounds, forming new carbon-carbon bonds, which distinguishes this process from electrophilic alkylation where the alkyl group acts as the electrophile.[23][24] The primary mechanism is nucleophilic addition, where the carbanionic carbon of the organometallic attacks the electrophilic carbon of a π-bond, such as in carbonyl groups (C=O). For instance, in the addition to aldehydes or ketones, the organometallic adds to the carbonyl carbon, forming an alkoxide intermediate that is subsequently hydrolyzed to yield a secondary or tertiary alcohol. A representative example is the Grignard reaction with an aldehyde:
RMgBr+RXCHO2HX3OX+1etherRCH(OH)RX \ce{R-MgBr + R'-CHO ->[1. ether][2. H3O+] R-CH(OH)-R'}
This reaction proceeds via a six-membered transition state in some cases, but generally involves direct nucleophilic attack followed by protonation. Organolithium reagents follow a similar pathway but are more reactive due to the greater polarization of the C-Li bond compared to C-Mg.[23][25] Key types of nucleophilic alkylation include addition to unsaturated systems beyond simple carbonyls, such as imines or nitriles, where the nucleophile adds to the C=N or C≡N bond, respectively, often yielding amines or ketones after workup. Nucleophilic substitution on sp³ carbons is less common with these reagents due to competing elimination, but can occur under controlled conditions with less hindered alkyl halides using organocopper derivatives derived from organolithiums or Grignards. The high nucleophilicity of these carbanions drives rapid reaction rates, but side reactions are prevalent; for example, with ketones possessing α-hydrogens, enolization can occur via deprotonation, reducing yields by forming enolates instead of addition products. This side reaction is exacerbated by the basicity of the organometallic, which competes with nucleophilic attack.[26][27][28] These metal-mediated processes are essential for C-C bond formation in organic synthesis, enabling the construction of complex carbon frameworks from simpler precursors, in contrast to the arene-focused electrophilic alkylations.[29]

Site-Specific Alkylation

C-Alkylation

C-Alkylation refers to the introduction of an alkyl group to an sp³ or sp² hybridized carbon atom, typically through the generation of carbanions or enolates that act as nucleophiles in forming new carbon-carbon bonds. This process is a cornerstone of organic synthesis for constructing complex carbon frameworks, often involving the replacement of a hydrogen atom on the carbon adjacent to a carbonyl group or on an aromatic ring.[30][31] In enolate alkylation, the mechanism proceeds via an SN2 reaction where the enolate carbon attacks a primary or secondary alkyl halide, leading to inversion of configuration at the electrophilic carbon and formation of the alkylated carbonyl compound. Kinetic control is achieved by using strong, non-nucleophilic bases like lithium diisopropylamide (LDA) at low temperatures (e.g., -78°C in THF), favoring the less substituted enolate for regioselective C-alkylation. Thermodynamic control, conversely, employs weaker bases like sodium ethoxide at room temperature, yielding the more substituted enolate but often with lower efficiency due to competing side reactions. Enolates exhibit ambident reactivity, with the negative charge delocalized between carbon and oxygen; in solution phase with soft electrophiles such as alkyl bromides, C-alkylation predominates over O-alkylation, as per hard-soft acid-base (HSAB) principles.[30][31][32] A representative example is the alkylation of the enolate derived from acetone (CH₃COCH₃) using ethyl bromide (CH₃CH₂Br), which yields pentan-2-one (CH₃COCH₂CH₂CH₃) after deprotonation with a base and subsequent SN2 reaction. For aromatic systems, Friedel-Crafts alkylation involves electrophilic aromatic substitution, where an arene (ArH) reacts with an alkyl chloride (RCl) in the presence of a Lewis acid to form ArR + HCl, attaching the alkyl group to the sp² carbon of the ring.[30][33] These methods enable the synthesis of intricate carbon chains and substituted aromatics, such as in the construction of β-keto esters or natural products like terpenes through iterative enolate alkylations. Friedel-Crafts alkylation is particularly valuable for preparing alkylbenzenes used in pharmaceuticals and materials.[30][33] Key challenges include polyalkylation, as the monoalkylated product in enolate reactions is more acidic and prone to further deprotonation, leading to over-alkylation unless excess base is avoided or protecting groups are used. Steric hindrance from bulky alkyl halides or substrates can reduce SN2 efficiency, favoring elimination instead, while in Friedel-Crafts, carbocation rearrangements complicate regioselectivity.[30][34][33]

Heteroatom Alkylation

Heteroatom alkylation refers to the chemical process of attaching an alkyl group to a heteroatom, such as nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, or sulfur, typically through nucleophilic substitution reactions. These reactions leverage the lone pairs on heteroatoms to displace leaving groups from electrophilic alkylating agents, enabling the synthesis of ammonium salts, ethers, phosphonium salts, and sulfides. Common reagents include primary alkyl halides (e.g., iodides or bromides) and sulfonate esters like tosylates, which favor SN2 pathways for clean monoalkylation.[35][36] N-Alkylation of amines proceeds by the nucleophilic attack of the amine nitrogen on an alkyl halide, forming alkylammonium salts. For primary amines, the reaction with methyl iodide yields a secondary ammonium iodide, as illustrated by the equation:
RNH2+CH3IRNH2CH3+I \mathrm{RNH_2 + CH_3I \rightarrow RNH_2CH_3^+ I^-}
This process can be iterative, leading to overalkylation, but exhaustive methylation with excess methyl iodide converts amines to quaternary ammonium iodides, a key step in the Hofmann elimination for alkene synthesis.[35][37] O-Alkylation of alcohols and phenols typically employs the Williamson ether synthesis, where the deprotonated alkoxide or phenoxide attacks an alkyl halide to form an ether. The general reaction is:
ROH+RXbaseROR+HX \mathrm{ROH + R'X \xrightarrow{\text{base}} ROR' + HX}
This method is highly effective for primary alkyl halides, providing unsymmetrical ethers with good yields under basic conditions, though secondary or tertiary halides may lead to elimination side products./13%3A_Alcohols_and_Phenols/13.10%3A_Alkoxylation_-_The_Williamson_Ether_Synthesis) P-Alkylation of tertiary phosphines, such as triphenylphosphine, generates phosphonium salts used in reactions like the Wittig olefination. The nucleophilic phosphorus displaces the halide from an alkyl bromide:
Ph3P+RBrPh3PR+Br \mathrm{Ph_3P + RBr \rightarrow Ph_3PR^+ Br^-}
This SN2 reaction is straightforward with primary alkyl halides and forms stable quaternary salts essential for ylide preparation.[38] S-Alkylation of thiols produces sulfides (thioethers) via nucleophilic attack by the thiolate anion on an alkyl halide. Thiols are deprotonated under basic conditions to enhance reactivity, yielding products like:
RSH+RXbaseRSR+HX \mathrm{RSH + R'X \xrightarrow{\text{base}} RSR' + HX}
This approach is efficient for primary alkyl halides, with thiols exhibiting higher nucleophilicity than alcohols, often requiring milder conditions./Thiols_and_Sulfides/Thiols_and_Sulfides) Regioselectivity in heteroatom alkylation arises with ambident nucleophiles, where the negative charge is delocalized over multiple sites, such as oxygen and carbon in enolates. For enolates, soft electrophiles like alkyl halides tend to favor C-alkylation, while harder ones promote O-alkylation, contrasting with dedicated C-alkylation methods. Phenoxides and amides also display this duality, with solvent polarity influencing the site of attack—protic solvents favoring O-alkylation and aprotic ones enhancing C-selectivity./09%3A_The_Reactions_of_Carbonyl_Compounds_at_the_Alpha_Carbon/9.03%3A_Ambident_Nucleophiles_and_Regioselectivity)[39]

Special Methods

Methylation with Diazomethane

Diazomethane (CH₂N₂), a yellow gas, serves as a versatile methylating agent in organic synthesis, enabling the introduction of methyl groups to carboxylic acids, phenols, alcohols, and active methylene compounds under mild conditions. Its reactivity stems from the weak N-N bond, allowing facile loss of nitrogen to generate reactive intermediates that transfer the methyl unit without requiring a leaving group or strong bases, making it ideal for labile substrates that might degrade under harsher alkylation protocols. This method contrasts with traditional O-alkylation approaches by offering cleaner reaction profiles and simpler purification due to the inert nitrogen byproduct. The general mechanism involves initial decomposition of diazomethane to a singlet methylene carbene (:CH₂), which can insert or transfer the methyl group, though specific pathways vary by substrate. For carboxylic acids, the process is acid-catalyzed: the carboxylic proton transfers to the terminal nitrogen of diazomethane, forming a methyl diazonium cation (CH₃N₂⁺) that undergoes nucleophilic attack by the carboxylate anion, displacing N₂ to yield the methyl ester. This reaction proceeds quantitatively at room temperature in ethereal solvents and is widely applied in esterification for analytical purposes, such as preparing fatty acid methyl esters for gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. The equation is:
RCOX2H+CHX2NX2RCOX2CHX3+NX2 \ce{RCO2H + CH2N2 -> RCO2CH3 + N2}
For O-methylation of phenols and alcohols, a Lewis acid catalyst like boron trifluoride etherate (BF₃·OEt₂) coordinates to the oxygen, enhancing nucleophilicity and promoting attack on the activated diazomethane, again liberating N₂. Phenols react more slowly than carboxylic acids, often requiring slightly elevated temperatures (>0°C), but the conditions remain gentle enough for sensitive aromatic systems. The representative equation is:
ROH+CHX2NX2BFX3ROCHX3+NX2 \ce{ROH + CH2N2 ->[BF3] ROCH3 + N2}
This catalytic variant is particularly useful for converting phenolic hydroxyls to anisole derivatives without side reactions common in base-promoted alkylations. Diazomethane also facilitates C-methylation of active methylene compounds, such as β-dicarbonyls or nitroalkanes, where the acidic α-proton enables enolate formation; the carbanion then attacks protonated diazomethane or the carbene intermediate, installing a methyl group at the carbon center. For instance, ethyl acetoacetate undergoes selective mono-C-methylation at the active site under controlled conditions, providing access to α-substituted derivatives for further synthetic elaboration. These reactions highlight diazomethane's utility in constructing quaternary centers in complex molecules. The primary advantages of diazomethane-mediated methylation include its operational simplicity, high yields (often >95%), and compatibility with functional groups intolerant to acidic or basic conditions. However, its inherent instability poses safety risks, including potential explosiveness upon concentration or contamination, warranting specialized handling as discussed in the hazards section.

Oxidative Addition to Metals

Oxidative addition represents a fundamental process in transition metal-mediated alkylation, wherein an alkyl halide undergoes a two-electron insertion into the metal-halide bond of a low-valent transition metal complex, resulting in the formation of a metal-carbon σ-bond and a concomitant increase in the metal's formal oxidation state by two units, typically from M(0) to M(II).[40] This concerted mechanism proceeds via a three-center transition state involving the carbon-halide bond and the metal center, often favored for primary alkyl halides with late transition metals due to their nucleophilic character and ability to accommodate the increased coordination number.[41] The reaction is stereospecific with retention of configuration at carbon for certain systems, highlighting its utility in stereocontrolled synthesis.[41] A classic example is the oxidative addition of methyl iodide to tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)nickel(0), $ \ce{Ni(PPh3)4} $, which rapidly forms the methyl-nickel(II) iodide complex $ \ce{(PPh3)2Ni(CH3)I} $ at room temperature, demonstrating the high reactivity of Ni(0) toward unactivated primary alkyl iodides. This product can further decompose via reductive elimination to ethane, underscoring the reversibility and subsequent reactivity of the alkyl-metal intermediate. In synthetic applications, oxidative addition serves as the key initiation step for forming organometallic intermediates in cross-coupling reactions, such as the Negishi coupling, where the alkyl-palladium or nickel halide species transmetalates with an organozinc reagent before reductive elimination to forge new carbon-carbon bonds.[42] This process enables efficient alkylation of sp³-hybridized carbons, particularly challenging with alkyl electrophiles due to potential β-hydride elimination, but is mitigated by ligand design and metal selection.[42] The choice of metal significantly influences the efficiency and selectivity of oxidative addition; palladium(0) and nickel(0) are preferred for their d¹⁰ electronic configurations that promote facile addition, while platinum(0) offers stability for mechanistic studies but slower reactivity.[41] These late transition metals facilitate the oxidation state change and coordination expansion essential for the process. Overall, this step is pivotal in catalytic cycles for alkyl transfer, enabling diverse transformations in organic synthesis by generating reactive alkyl-metal species under mild conditions.

Practical Considerations

Catalysts

Catalysts play a crucial role in alkylation reactions by activating substrates, stabilizing intermediates, and enhancing selectivity. Common types include Lewis acids, Brønsted acids, and transition metal complexes, each suited to specific reaction conditions and substrates. Lewis acids, such as aluminum chloride (AlCl₃), are widely used in electrophilic aromatic substitutions like the Friedel-Crafts alkylation, where they coordinate to the leaving group of an alkyl halide to generate a carbocation electrophile.[43] In the mechanism of AlCl₃-catalyzed alkylation, the Lewis acid binds to the halide ion, forming a complex that facilitates departure of the leaving group and produces an alkyl carbocation paired with the tetrachloroaluminate anion:
AlClX3+RClcomplexationRX++AlClX4X \ce{AlCl3 + R-Cl ->[complexation] R+ + AlCl4-}
This carbocation then attacks the nucleophilic site, such as an aromatic ring, to form the alkylated product. The AlCl₄⁻ anion stabilizes the system and prevents side reactions in some cases.[43] Brønsted acids, including hydrofluoric acid (HF) and sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄), are employed in industrial alkylation processes, particularly for the reaction of isobutane with olefins to produce branched alkanes. As of 2025, approximately 42 U.S. refineries (32% of total) use HF alkylation units, accounting for about 42% of national alkylate production, though efforts to phase out HF continue due to its extreme hazards, including potential for catastrophic releases of lethal hydrofluoric acid clouds and systemic toxicity.[44][45] HF acts as a strong proton donor, protonating the olefin to form a carbocation that undergoes hydride transfer and combination steps, enabling efficient alkylation under liquid-phase conditions. These catalysts offer high activity but pose severe safety risks beyond corrosiveness, including history of near-miss incidents and regulatory pressures for replacement with solid acids.[46][47] Transition metal catalysts, such as palladium complexes, facilitate alkylation through cross-coupling mechanisms, particularly for sp³-hybridized alkyl groups. In Negishi-type couplings, Pd(0) species undergo oxidative addition to alkyl halides, followed by transmetalation with organozinc reagents and reductive elimination to form the C-C bond, allowing selective alkylation of unactivated alkyl electrophiles.[48] Selectivity in acid-catalyzed alkylations is often challenged by carbocation rearrangements, where primary carbocations rearrange via hydride or alkyl shifts to more stable secondary or tertiary isomers, leading to polyalkylation or undesired products. To mitigate this, catalysts like AlCl₃ are paired with secondary or tertiary alkyl halides that generate stable carbocations directly, or conditions are adjusted to favor kinetic control and minimize isomerization.[49] Zeolite-based catalysts are being developed as solid acid alternatives to liquid HF for isobutane-olefin alkylation in gasoline production, providing Brønsted acid sites within microporous structures to promote the reaction while confining carbocations to reduce rearrangements and improve branched product yields, such as trimethylpentanes. Beta and Y-type zeolites, modified with rare-earth metals, show promise in research for high selectivity, though commercial adoption remains limited.[50] Advances in asymmetric alkylation since 2015 have focused on chiral catalysts and organocatalysts for enantioselective C-C bond formation. For example, copper-catalyzed asymmetric allylic alkylations of indoles and enolates with allylic phosphates achieve up to 99% enantiomeric excess, enabling synthesis of chiral pharmaceuticals. Additionally, enantioselective electrosynthesis using chiral mediators has emerged for stereocontrolled alkylations of unactivated C-H bonds.[51][52]

Hazards

Alkylating agents pose significant chemical hazards due to their high reactivity, which can lead to explosivity and toxicity. For instance, diazomethane is a highly explosive gas that decomposes violently upon shock, friction, or contact with rough surfaces, necessitating extreme caution in its handling.[53] Similarly, certain alkyl sulfonates, such as methyl methanesulfonate, exhibit carcinogenicity; the National Toxicology Program classifies it as reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen based on sufficient evidence from animal studies showing tumors in multiple tissues.[54] These properties arise from the agents' ability to form reactive intermediates that can ignite or decompose exothermically under ambient conditions. Biologically, alkylating agents primarily exert their risks through DNA alkylation, which introduces adducts on nucleophilic sites like the O6 position of guanine, leading to base mispairing and mutations during replication.[55] This genotoxic mechanism underlies their mutagenic potential, with unrepaired lesions contributing to chromosomal aberrations and cell death.[56] A notable example is sulfur mustard, a bifunctional alkylating agent that forms DNA crosslinks and monoadducts, resulting in severe cytotoxicity, mutagenesis, and long-term risks such as increased cancer incidence in exposed populations.[57] These effects highlight the agents' role in inducing genomic instability, particularly in rapidly dividing cells.[58] Safe handling of alkylating agents requires stringent protocols to mitigate exposure and reactivity. Operations should be conducted in fume hoods with adequate ventilation to prevent inhalation of vapors, combined with the use of inert atmospheres like nitrogen or argon for moisture- or air-sensitive compounds to avoid unwanted reactions.[59] Specific precautions for alkyl fluorides include wearing chemical-resistant gloves and protective eyewear, as they can cause severe burns or systemic fluoride toxicity upon skin contact or inhalation, though less reactive than hydrogen fluoride.[60] For aziridinium ions, the highly electrophilic intermediates in nitrogen mustard alkylations, handling must minimize formation outside controlled reactions due to their extreme reactivity and potential for rapid DNA alkylation even at trace levels.[61] Personal protective equipment, such as nitrile gloves and lab coats, is essential, with spill response involving inert absorbents to prevent ignition or release.[62] Regulatory classifications underscore these hazards for common alkylating agents. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) sets a permissible exposure limit (PEL) for ethyl chloride at 1000 ppm as an 8-hour time-weighted average, classifying it as a flammable gas with potential for cardiac sensitization and central nervous system depression.[63] The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) does not classify ethyl chloride as carcinogenic but regulates it under hazardous air pollutants due to its volatility and environmental persistence.[64] For broader alkylating agents like antineoplastics, OSHA recommends engineering controls and monitoring to limit exposure below actionable levels, treating them as hazardous drugs.[65] In industrial settings, alkylation processes contribute to environmental impacts primarily through volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions, which escape from reactors, storage, and wastewater treatment. These VOCs, including alkanes and alkenes from petroleum alkylation units, contribute to photochemical smog formation and ground-level ozone, with emissions potentially exceeding 10 tons per year per facility without controls.[66] Mitigation involves vapor recovery systems and catalytic oxidation to reduce atmospheric release, aligning with EPA standards for refinery operations.[67]

Biological Aspects

Role in Biochemistry

In biological systems, alkylation primarily manifests as methylation reactions that play essential roles in metabolism, gene regulation, and cellular signaling. The key natural alkylating agent is S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), a sulfonium compound derived from methionine and ATP, which serves as the universal methyl donor for a wide array of enzymatic processes. SAM enables the transfer of methyl groups to various nucleophilic substrates, including nucleic acids, proteins, and lipids, thereby influencing epigenetic modifications, protein function, and membrane dynamics. This process is tightly regulated to maintain cellular homeostasis, as disruptions in SAM levels can alter methylation patterns and contribute to metabolic imbalances. The mechanism of SAM-dependent methylation involves an SN2-like nucleophilic attack by the substrate on the electrophilic methyl carbon of SAM, catalyzed by specific methyltransferases. In this reaction, the enzyme positions the nucleophile (R-H) to displace the sulfonium leaving group, yielding the methylated product (R-CH₃) and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) as a byproduct. A simplified representation of this enzymatic transfer is:
CH3-SAM+R-HR-CH3+SAH \text{CH}_3\text{-SAM} + \text{R-H} \rightarrow \text{R-CH}_3 + \text{SAH}
This reaction is reversible in principle but driven forward by the rapid hydrolysis of SAH to adenosine and homocysteine, preventing product inhibition. Methyltransferases exhibit high specificity; for instance, DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) target cytosine residues in CpG islands, while protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) and histone methyltransferases (HMTs) modify lysine or arginine side chains.[68] Prominent examples include histone methylation, which regulates epigenetics by altering chromatin structure and gene accessibility. HMTs, such as SET domain proteins, use SAM to add one, two, or three methyl groups to histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4me3) or lysine 9 (H3K9me3), promoting active transcription or heterochromatin formation, respectively. Another critical instance is the methylation of phospholipids, particularly the conversion of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) to phosphatidylcholine (PC) in mammalian cells and yeast, mediated by PE methyltransferases (PEMTs). This three-step sequential methylation consumes a significant portion of cellular SAM—up to 30-50% in some contexts, such as liver cells—and is vital for membrane fluidity and lipid homeostasis. DNA methylation via DNMTs similarly relies on SAM to silence genes during development and imprinting.[68][69] Alkylation has played an evolutionary role in the biosynthesis of complex natural products, such as alkaloids and terpenes, enhancing their structural diversity and biological activity. In alkaloid pathways, SAM-dependent methyltransferases catalyze N- or O-methylations; for example, in psilocybin biosynthesis, the PsiM enzyme methylates tryptamine derivatives to form the psychoactive compound.[70] Similarly, in tropane alkaloid production in Erythroxylum coca, multiple SAM-utilizing steps introduce methyl groups to construct the bicyclic core.[71] For terpenes, prenyltransferases perform C-alkylation by attaching isoprenoid units (e.g., geranyl or farnesyl pyrophosphate) to aromatic or aliphatic scaffolds, as seen in the cryptic prenyltransferase activity of terpene cyclases that alkylate indole rings in fungal metabolites.[72] These alkylation events likely conferred selective advantages by enabling the evolution of bioactive secondary metabolites for defense and signaling.[73]

Alkylating Agents in Medicine and Toxicology

Alkylating agents are a class of compounds widely used in chemotherapy to treat various cancers by targeting DNA in rapidly dividing cells. These agents, primarily nitrogen mustards such as cyclophosphamide and mechlorethamine, function by adding alkyl groups to nucleophilic sites on DNA, leading to cross-linking of DNA strands and inhibition of replication and transcription. Cyclophosphamide, for instance, is administered as a prodrug that is metabolically activated in the liver to form phosphoramide mustard, which alkylates DNA at the N7 position of guanine, forming intra- and interstrand cross-links that trigger apoptosis in cancer cells. This mechanism was first exploited in the 1940s following observations of the cytotoxic effects of sulfur mustard gas during World War II, leading to the development of nitrogen mustards as anticancer drugs by researchers at Yale University. In toxicology, alkylating agents act as potent poisons by indiscriminately alkylating biomolecules, including DNA, RNA, and proteins, which disrupts cellular function and causes cell death. Dimethyl sulfate, a common industrial alkylating agent, is highly toxic via inhalation or skin contact, alkylating guanine residues in DNA to form O6-methylguanine adducts that lead to mutagenesis, carcinogenesis, and acute respiratory distress. Exposure to such agents can result in severe blistering, bone marrow suppression, and long-term risks of secondary malignancies due to their genotoxic nature. The aziridinium ion intermediate, formed by the cyclization of nitrogen mustards in aqueous environments, enhances their reactivity toward nucleophiles, explaining their high potency as both therapeutic and toxic agents. A simplified representation of DNA alkylation by these agents is:
Base-NH+R+Base-NHR \text{Base-NH} + \text{R}^+ \rightarrow \text{Base-NHR}
where R+ denotes the electrophilic alkyl group. Despite their efficacy, resistance to alkylating agents in chemotherapy arises from mechanisms such as enhanced DNA repair via the MGMT enzyme, which removes alkyl adducts, or increased glutathione levels that neutralize the agents, complicating treatment regimens. Ongoing research focuses on combination therapies and novel alkylating agents to overcome these challenges, building on the foundational work from the mid-20th century. As of 2025, alkylating agents continue to play an evolving role, with recent studies highlighting their integration in breast cancer therapies and the development of next-generation peptide-drug conjugates for multiple myeloma treatment.[74][75]

Industrial Applications

Commodity Chemicals

Alkylation reactions play a central role in the industrial synthesis of commodity chemicals, particularly ethers, alkylaromatics, and amines used in solvents, intermediates, and consumer products. These processes involve the addition of alkyl groups to parent molecules, often using ethylene, ethanol, or other alkylating agents under catalytic conditions to produce high-volume materials efficiently. One key product is ethylbenzene, synthesized primarily through the Friedel-Crafts alkylation of benzene with ethylene. This reaction occurs in continuous liquid-phase processes using aluminum chloride as a catalyst or in vapor-phase variants with zeolite catalysts, achieving per-pass conversions of benzene up to 60% and overall yields exceeding 98% after recycling unreacted materials.[76] The process minimizes polyalkylation side products through excess benzene and transalkylation steps, with economics favoring large-scale operations where feedstock costs (benzene and ethylene) constitute about 70-80% of production expenses, yielding internal rates of return above 20% for plants producing over 500,000 tons annually.[77] Global production of ethylbenzene reached approximately 35 million metric tons in 2024, primarily as a precursor to styrene for polystyrene manufacturing.[78] Another important commodity is triethylamine, produced via the alkylation of ammonia with ethanol under high temperature and pressure, often with copper-chromium catalysts in continuous reactors. This exothermic reaction proceeds stepwise from mono- to triethylamine, with yields of 80-90% for the tertiary amine after fractional distillation to separate isomers and byproducts.[79] The process is economically viable due to low-cost feedstocks and high demand in agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, with global output at about 195 thousand metric tons in 2024.[80] Industrial alkylation for these commodities overwhelmingly utilizes continuous processes over batch methods, enabling steady-state operation, better heat management, and economies of scale that reduce unit costs by 20-30% compared to intermittent production. Catalysts such as solid acids or metal oxides enhance selectivity and longevity, minimizing downtime. Since the 2010s, sustainability efforts have driven a transition to bio-based alkylating agents, exemplified by bio-ethylene from fermented ethanol in ethylbenzene synthesis, with facilities like Braskem's producing over 200,000 tons annually of renewable-grade product to lower carbon footprints by up to 80% relative to petrochemical routes.[81] This shift addresses environmental pressures while maintaining competitive economics through incentives for green chemistry.

Gasoline Production

In petroleum refining, alkylation is a key process for producing high-octane gasoline components by reacting olefins, such as propene and butenes, with isobutane in the presence of acid catalysts like hydrofluoric acid (HF) or sulfuric acid (H2SO4).[3][82] The reaction occurs under controlled conditions, typically at temperatures between 0–40°C for H2SO4 and 20–50°C for HF, with an isobutane-to-olefin ratio of 5:1 to 10:1 to minimize side reactions and optimize yield.[83] The resulting alkylate is a mixture of branched paraffins, primarily in the C7–C9 range, which serves as a premium blending stock for unleaded gasoline due to its high quality and low volatility.[9] The alkylation process was developed in the 1930s and 1940s, initially to meet the demand for high-octane aviation fuel during World War II.[3] Phillips Petroleum pioneered the HF-based method in the early 1940s, enabling efficient production of alkylate with better yields compared to earlier sulfuric acid approaches; U.S. refineries with alkylation units are roughly split between those using H2SO4 and HF, though safety concerns are driving exploration of alternatives.[84] The mechanism involves a carbocation chain reaction initiated by protonation of the olefin to form a carbocation, which then attacks the isobutane molecule, followed by hydride transfer to regenerate the catalyst and produce the alkylated product.[85] A representative reaction is the alkylation of isobutene with isobutane to form isooctane (2,2,4-trimethylpentane):
(CHX3)2C=CHX2+(CHX3)3CH(CHX3)3CCHX2CH(CHX3)X2 (\ce{CH3})_2\ce{C=CH2} + (\ce{CH3})_3\ce{CH} \rightarrow (\ce{CH3})_3\ce{C-CH2-CH(CH3)2}
This step yields a tertiary carbocation intermediate that rearranges minimally, favoring high-octane branched isomers.[86] Alkylation significantly enhances gasoline octane ratings to 92–96 RON, allowing reformulated fuels to achieve overall ratings above 90 without lead additives, and it contributes to cleaner combustion with low sulfur and olefin content.[87] In the United States, where gasoline production reached approximately 9 million barrels per day in 2024, alkylate accounts for 10–15% of the blend (with production capacity of 1.32 million barrels per stream day), supporting environmental regulations and high-performance fuel demands.[88][89] Due to safety concerns with HF, such as its toxicity and potential for aerosol formation in accidents, refineries are exploring solid acid catalysts as alternatives to replace liquid acids entirely.[90] Technologies like KBR's K-SAAT and AlkyClean use zeolite-based or composite solid catalysts that maintain high activity and selectivity while eliminating acid handling risks, with pilot units demonstrating alkylate quality comparable to HF processes.[91][92]

Dealkylation

Dealkylation refers to the chemical process of cleaving an alkyl group from an organic molecule, typically resulting in the formation of a hydroxylated or otherwise modified parent compound and an alkyl fragment such as an aldehyde or halide.[93] This reaction serves as the reverse of alkylation and is crucial in both synthetic chemistry and biological systems for modifying molecular structures.[94] One primary method of dealkylation is oxidative dealkylation, often mediated by cytochrome P450 enzymes in the liver, which catalyze the removal of alkyl groups through sequential oxidation steps involving hydrogen atom abstraction and oxygen rebound mechanisms.[95] For instance, in the metabolism of alkyl-substituted aromatics, cytochrome P450 facilitates the conversion of a benzylic alkyl chain, such as in R-CH₂-Ph, to phenol (PhOH) and an aldehyde (RCHO), enabling the detoxification of xenobiotics.[96] Another common oxidative approach targets ethers or amines, where the enzyme introduces an oxygen atom alpha to the alkyl-oxygen or alkyl-nitrogen bond, leading to unstable intermediates that fragment.[97] Acid hydrolysis represents a non-enzymatic method, particularly effective for cleaving alkyl ethers under acidic conditions, where protonation of the oxygen atom facilitates nucleophilic attack and alkyl departure.[98] A representative example is the demethylation of anisole using concentrated hydroiodic acid (HI), which proceeds as follows:
C6H5OCH3+HIC6H5OH+CH3I \text{C}_6\text{H}_5\text{OCH}_3 + \text{HI} \rightarrow \text{C}_6\text{H}_5\text{OH} + \text{CH}_3\text{I}
This SN2-like mechanism preferentially cleaves the smaller alkyl group due to its higher reactivity, yielding phenol and methyl iodide.[99] The general equation for acid-catalyzed ether dealkylation, particularly with HX acids, can be represented as:
R-OR’+HXROH+R’X \text{R-OR'} + \text{HX} \rightarrow \text{ROH} + \text{R'X}
Mechanisms vary: SN2 for primary or methyl groups (as in the example), or SN1 involving carbocations for secondary or tertiary alkyl groups, depending on the acid and conditions.[100] In applications, dealkylation plays a key role in drug metabolism, where cytochrome P450-mediated O- or N-dealkylation transforms lipophilic alkylated pharmaceuticals into more polar, excretable metabolites, as seen in the conversion of codeine to morphine via O-demethylation.[101] In organic synthesis, it enables regioselective removal of alkyl protecting groups from phenols or amines, allowing precise control in multistep reactions without affecting other functionalities, often using enzymatic or mild acidic conditions for selectivity.[102]

Transalkylation

Transalkylation refers to a chemical reaction in which an alkyl group is transferred from one organic molecule to another, resulting in the redistribution of alkyl substituents without a net gain or loss of alkyl groups in the overall system.[103] This process is distinct from simple alkylation or dealkylation, as it involves the migration of alkyl moieties between substrates, often under catalytic conditions to achieve equilibrium adjustments in molecular composition. In aromatic systems, transalkylation is predominantly acid-catalyzed, utilizing solid acid catalysts such as zeolites (e.g., ZSM-5 or mordenite) to promote the reaction. The mechanism proceeds via the formation of carbenium ion intermediates within the confined pores of the zeolite framework, where protonation of an alkylaromatic leads to alkyl group detachment and subsequent attachment to another aromatic ring.[104] This stepwise transfer enhances selectivity by minimizing side reactions like cracking, particularly at moderate temperatures (around 300–500°C) and pressures in the presence of hydrogen to suppress coke formation.[105] A representative example is the disproportionation of toluene in BTX (benzene-toluene-xylene) production, where two toluene molecules undergo transalkylation to yield benzene and xylene:
2CX6HX5CHX3CX6HX6+CX6HX4(CHX3)X2 2 \ce{C6H5CH3 -> C6H6 + C6H4(CH3)2}
This reaction balances the overproduction of toluene from reforming processes by converting it into higher-value xylenes and benzene.[106] Another application involves the transalkylation of heavier aromatics (C9+), such as trimethylbenzenes, with benzene or toluene to produce additional xylenes, optimizing the aromatic product slate in refinery streams.[107] Transalkylation finds primary applications in petrochemical refining to fine-tune the distribution of aromatic isomers, enabling the maximization of para-xylene yields for polyethylene terephthalate production. Zeolite catalysts are preferred for their shape-selective properties, which favor the formation of desired linear alkyl transfers over branched or cyclic byproducts. Processes like ExxonMobil's TransPlus technology exemplify this, combining transalkylation with heavy aromatic upgrading for improved xylene yields and reduced benzene loss.[108] On an industrial scale, toluene transalkylation units in the 2020s are integrated into major petrochemical complexes, processing feedstocks derived from catalytic reforming and contributing to global BTX output. The global toluene market exceeds 36 million metric tons annually as of 2025, with over 50% consumed in transalkylation and related units.[109][110] These units typically operate at capacities of 200,000 to 1 million tons per year per facility, enhancing overall refinery economics by valorizing surplus toluene.[109]

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