Aldehyde to Alcohol using NaBH4 reduction

General Info

Reaction & Reagents info

Advantages

  • Inexpensive oxidation method on manufacturing scale
  • Also, it is less toxic, compared to chromium-based alternatives (PCC and PDC)

Disadvantages

  • The liberation of gases viz., malodrous dimethylsulphide (Me2S) and poisonous carbon monoxide (CO) are to be handled appropriately

Useful Links on Reagent & Reaction:

Mechanism

Additional details

Scheme & Procedure

Aldehyde/Ketone to Alcohol by NaBH4:

General Procedure:

To a solution of aldehyde or ketone (1 eq.) in THF (10 Vol) is added NaBH4 (1.2 eq) and striired for 4 h. The reaction is monitored by TLC. The RM is quenched by adding aq. NH4Cl or aq. 1N HCl (10 Vol) at 0 oC and stirred for 2 h. The resultant mixture is extracted with DCM (10 Vol) two times. The combined organic layer is washed with water and brine solution (5 Vol), dried over Na2SO4 and concentrated to afford the desired compound

Note:

  • The most preferable solvent is THF, MeOH or EtOH (or mixture of solvents)
  • It is usually performed at room temp. or at low temp (0o C), depending on the nature of the reaction

Typical Procedure:

WO2016011390, page no. 112

Process perspective

Swern oxidation could be carried out on large-scale. However, the reaction involves the liberation of 1 eq. each of the gases such as Me2S (dimethylsulphide), CO (carbon monoxide), CO2. Appropriate safety controls are to be ensured while performing manufacturing. During work-up, HCl gets converted to amine salt (such as NEt3.HCl).

  • Swern Oxidation is one of the inexpensive methods to manufacture aldehydes or ketones from Alcohols
  • The liberation of gases viz., malodrous dimethylsulphide (Me2S), poisonous carbon monoxide (CO) and CO2 are to be handled appropriately
  • It is important to maintain the reaction mixture at -78 oC. If the temperature is not maintained, there is a possibility of formation of mixed thioacetals (see mechanism in General Info section)

Scale-Up Typical Procedure:

Green Chemistry Aspects:

Reaction Tree

References