Arthur Birch, building on earlier (1937) work by Wooster and Godfrey who used water, developed the reaction in the 1940s while working in the
Dyson Perrins Laboratory at the
University of Oxford. Birch's original procedure used
sodium and
ethanol,
Alfred L. Wilds and
Norman A. Nelson later discovered that lithium gives better yields, they published their findings in 1953.. However the use of lithium, in the Birch reduction, was reported in the celebrated 1951 synthesis of
Norethisterone by
Luis E. Miramontes,
George Rosenkranz and
Carl Djerassi who thanked Wilds for information on this modified procedure. The reaction was difficult to understand mechanistically, with controversy lasting into the 1990s. The case with electron-withdrawing groups is obvious, because the Birch alkylation serves as a trap for the penultimate dianion D. This dianion appears even in alcohol-free reactions. Thus the initial protonation is
para rather than
ipso, as seen in the B-C transformation. For electron-donating substituents, Birch initially proposed
meta attack, corresponding to the location of greatest electron density in a neutral
benzene ring, a position endorsed by Krapcho and Bothner-By. These conclusions were challenged by Zimmerman in 1961, who computed electron densities of the radical and diene anions, revealing that the
ortho site which was most negative and thus most likely to protonate. Birch and Radom, in 1980, concluded that both
ortho and
meta substitutions would occur with a slight preference for
ortho. In the earlier 1990s, Zimmerman and Wang developed an experiment technique to distinguish between
ortho and
meta protonation. The method began with the premise that carbanions are much more basic than the corresponding radical anions and thus protonate less selectively. Correspondingly, the two protonations in Birch reduction should exhibit an
isotope effect: in a protium–deuterium medium, the radical anion should preferentially protonate and the carbanion deuterate. Indeed, a variety of
methoxylated aromatics exhibited less
ortho deuterium than
meta (a 1:7 ratio). Moreover, modern electron density computations now firmly indicated
ortho protonation; frontier orbital densities, most analogous to the traditional computations used in past studies, did not. Zimmerman and Wang had won the day: modern textbooks unequivocally agree that electron-donating substituents promote
ortho attack. ==Additional reading==