| Reactant1 =
Aromatic Ring | Reactant2 =
Alkylating Agent | Reagent1= | Product1 = Friedel-Crafts aromatic addition product | Sideproduct1 = HCl (reaction type dependent) }}|Section1=}}
With alkenes In commercial applications, the alkylating agents are generally
alkenes, some of the largest scale reactions practiced in industry. Such alkylations are of major industrial importance, e.g. for the production of
ethylbenzene, the precursor to polystyrene, from benzene and ethylene and for the production of cumene from benzene and propene in
cumene process: : : Industrial production typically uses
solid acids derived from a
zeolite as the catalyst.
With alkyl halides Friedel–Crafts alkylation involves the
alkylation of an
aromatic ring. Traditionally, the alkylating agents are
alkyl halides. Many alkylating agents can be used instead of alkyl halides. For example,
enones and
epoxides can be used in presence of protons. The reaction typically employs a strong
Lewis acid, such as
aluminium chloride as catalyst, to increase the electrophilicity of the alkylating agent. This reaction suffers from the disadvantage that the product is more
nucleophilic than the reactant because alkyl groups are
activators for the Friedel–Crafts reaction. Consequently, overalkylation can occur. However,
steric hindrance can be exploited to limit the number of successive alkylation cycles that occur, as in the
t-butylation of 1,4-dimethoxybenzene that gives only the product of two alkylation cycles and with only one of three possible isomers of it: : Furthermore, the reaction is only useful for primary alkyl halides in an intramolecular sense when a 5- or 6-membered ring is formed. For the intermolecular case, the reaction is limited to
tertiary alkylating agents, some secondary alkylating agents (ones for which carbocation rearrangement is degenerate), or alkylating agents that yield stabilized carbocations (e.g., benzylic or allylic ones). In the case of primary alkyl halides, the carbocation-like complex (R(+)---X---Al(-)Cl3) will undergo a
carbocation rearrangement reaction to give almost exclusively the rearranged product derived from a secondary or tertiary carbocation. :
Mechanism The general mechanism for primary alkyl halides is shown in the figure below. :For primary (and possibly secondary) alkyl halides, a carbocation-like complex with the Lewis acid, [R(+)---(X---MX
n)(–)] is more likely to be involved, rather than a free carbocation.
Friedel–Crafts dealkylation Friedel–Crafts alkylations can be
reversible. Although this is usually undesirable it can be exploited; for instance by facilitating
transalkylation reactions. is produced via transalkylation, a special form of Friedel–Crafts alkylation. It also allows alkyl chains to be added reversibly as
protecting groups. This approach is used industrially in the synthesis of
4,4'-biphenol via the oxidative coupling and subsequent dealkylation of
2,6-di-tert-butylphenol. == Acylation ==