Use in organic chemistry Lithium aluminium hydride (LAH) is widely used in organic chemistry as a
reducing agent. Often as a solution in
diethyl ether and followed by an acid workup, it will convert
esters,
carboxylic acids,
acyl chlorides,
aldehydes, and
ketones into the corresponding
alcohols (see:
carbonyl reduction). Similarly, it converts
amide,
nitro,
nitrile,
imine,
oxime, and
organic azides into the
amines (see:
amide reduction). It reduces
quaternary ammonium cations into the corresponding tertiary amines. Reactivity can be tuned by replacing hydride groups
by alkoxy groups. Due to its pyrophoric nature, instability, toxicity, low shelf life and handling problems associated with its reactivity, it has been replaced in the last decade, both at the small-industrial scale and for large-scale reductions by the more convenient related reagent
sodium bis (2-methoxyethoxy)aluminium hydride, which exhibits similar reactivity but with higher safety, easier handling and better economics. LAH is most commonly used for the reduction of
esters and
carboxylic acids to primary alcohols; prior to the advent of LAH this was a difficult conversion involving
sodium metal in boiling
ethanol (the
Bouveault-Blanc reduction).
Aldehydes and
ketones can also be reduced to alcohols by LAH, but this is usually done using milder reagents such as sodium borohydride|; α, β-unsaturated ketones are reduced to allylic alcohols. When
epoxides are reduced using LAH, the reagent attacks the less
hindered end of the epoxide, usually producing a secondary or tertiary alcohol.
Epoxycyclohexanes are reduced to give axial alcohols preferentially. Partial reduction of
acid chlorides to give the corresponding aldehyde product cannot proceed via LAH, since the latter reduces all the way to the primary alcohol. Instead, the milder
lithium tri-tert-butoxyaluminum hydride, which reacts significantly faster with the acid chloride than with the aldehyde, must be used. For example, when
isovaleric acid is treated with
thionyl chloride to give isovaleroyl chloride, it can then be reduced via lithium tri-
tert-butoxyaluminum hydride to give isovaleraldehyde in 65% yield. File:LAH rxns.png|class=skin-invert-image| rect 5 12 91 74
alcohol rect 82 178 170 240
epoxide rect 121 9 193 69
alcohol2 rect 337 1 414 60
alcohol3 rect 458 55 526 117
alcohol4 rect 170 151 234 210
aldehyde rect 141 259 207 279
nitrile rect 135 281 196 300
amide rect 128 311 204 366
amine1 rect 264 268 339 334
carboxylic acid rect 457 362 529 413
alcohol5 rect 381 255 433 273
azide rect 469 244 525 269
amine2 rect 321 193 401 242
ester rect 261 141 320 203
ketone desc none • Notes: • Details on the new coding for clickable images is here:
mw:Extension:ImageMap • This image editor was used. Lithium aluminium hydride also reduces
alkyl halides to
alkanes. Alkyl iodides react the fastest, followed by alkyl bromides and then alkyl chlorides. Primary halides are the most reactive followed by secondary halides. Tertiary halides react only in certain cases. Lithium aluminium hydride does not reduce simple
alkenes or
arenes.
Alkynes are reduced only if an alcohol group is nearby, and alkenes are reduced in the presence of catalytic
TiCl4. It was observed that the reduces the double bond in the
N-allylamides.
Inorganic chemistry LAH is widely used to prepare main group and transition
metal hydrides from the corresponding metal
halides. : LAH also reacts with many inorganic ligands to form coordinated alumina complexes associated with lithium ions. have sparked renewed research into LiAlH4 during the last decade. A substantial research effort has been devoted to accelerating the decomposition kinetics by catalytic doping and by
ball milling. In order to take advantage of the total hydrogen capacity, the intermediate compound
LiH must be dehydrogenated as well. Due to its high thermodynamic stability this requires temperatures in excess of 400 °C, which is not considered feasible for transportation purposes. Accepting LiH + Al as the final product, the hydrogen storage capacity is reduced to 7.96 wt%. Another problem related to hydrogen storage is the recycling back to LiAlH4 which, owing to its relatively low stability, requires an extremely high hydrogen pressure in excess of 10000 bar. :LiAlH4 + KH → KAlH4 + LiH The reverse, i.e., production of LAH from either sodium aluminium hydride or potassium aluminium hydride can be achieved by reaction with
LiCl or lithium hydride in
diethyl ether or
THF: :2 LiAlH4 + MgBr2 → Mg(AlH4)2 + 2 LiBr
Red-Al (or SMEAH, NaAlH2(OC2H4OCH3)2) is synthesized by reacting sodium aluminum tetrahydride (NaAlH4) and
2-methoxyethanol: == Safety ==