Friedel-Crafts alkylation

The Friedel-Crafts alkylation is a name reaction in organic chemistry. It is used to add alkyl groups to aromatic rings using a Lewis acid like aluminium chloride as a catalyst.

Materials

The Friedel-Crafts alkylation starts with an aromatic compound like benzene (C6H6) and an alkyl halide like ethyl chloride (CH3CH2Cl). A small amount of a Lewis acid, usually aluminium chloride, is added to be a catalyst.

Alkenes can be used in place of alkyl halides by using a Brønsted acid as the catalyst. This version of the reaction is common in the chemical industry.

Mechanism

The Friedel-Crafts alkylation is a type of electrophilic aromatic substitution with two carbocation intermediates.[1] First, the alkyl halide reacts with the catalyst, making a carbocation and an anionic Lewis adduct:

CH3CH2Cl + AlCl3 → CH3CH+2 + AlCl4

If starting from an alkene and Brønsted acid, the carbocation is instead made from protonation of the alkene:

H2C=CH2 + H2SO4 → CH3CH+2 + HSO4

The carbocation is a strong electrophile, so it is attracted to the many electrons in the aromatic ring. The carbocation reacts with the ring, making a new covalent bond between carbon atoms to form a larger arenium intermediate,

CH3CH+2 + C6H6 → C6H6(CH2CH3)+

Finally, the adduct abstracts a hydrogen ion from the larger carbocation, which regenerates the catalyst and releases the hydrogen halide byproduct:

C6H6(CH2CH3)+ + AlCl4 → C6H5(CH2CH3) + AlCl3 + HCl

The net reaction is

C6H6 + CH3CH2ClC6H5(CH2CH3) + HCl

References

  1. John C. McMurray. "16.3 Alkylation and Acylation of Aromatic Rings: The Friedel–Crafts Reaction". Organic Chemistry, a Tenth Edition. Houston, TX: OpenStax.