What is a Grignard reagent?

1 Answer
Aug 9, 2016

Grignard reagents are organometallic reagents in which an hydrocarbyl residue is more or less directly bound to a magnesium metal centre. They offer one of the few means of C-C bond formation.

Explanation:

Given a few provisos (i.e. no protic functional groups, exclusion of water) an hydrocarbyl halide, R-X, may be metallated directly with magnesium metal:

R-X + Mg rarr R-MgX

The R-MgX reagent, formally alkyl (hydrocarbyl) magnesium halide, will react as a carbanion, R^(delta-)""^(delta+)MgX. Typically the reaction is performed in an ethereal solvent, Et_2O, or "THF". The Grignard reagent is usually not isolated, but used directly, and added to aldehydes to give 2""^@ alcohols (after workup),

R-MgX + R'C(=O)H rarr RC(-OMgX)R'

to ketones to give 3""^@ alcohols,

R-MgX + R'C(=O)H rarr RC(-OMgX)R'

and to dry ice to give a carboxylate salt that is 1 carbon longer than the Grignard residue:

R-MgX + CO_2 rarr RC(=O)(-OMgX)

In fact, still the best way to make a carboxylic acid is to pour your Grignard mixture directly onto dry ice, and step back. The Grignard reagent usually fails to react with alkyl halides to give direct C-C coupling, but there are reports of the use of copper salts to add to the Grignard to make an organocopper species that is capable of direct reaction with RCH_2X.

To conclude, Grignard reagents offer ease of synthesis (of course, you can't be too ham-fisted), prodigious reactivity, and adaptability. We can exploit the water sensitivity of the Grignard if we want to label a hydrocarbon chain with deuterium, ""^2H, or tritium labels, ""^3H labels.

R-MgX + ""^2H_2O rarr R-""^2H + MgO""^2HX

This is a cheap and efficient way to label a hydrocarbyl chain. And as I have mentioned before it is good way to get your lazy graduate students off the computer and back onto the laboratory bench.