dasdas

Master Organic Chemistry Reaction Guide

Addition of NaBH4 to ketones to give secondary alcohols

Description:  Addition of sodium borohydride (NaBH4) to ketones gives secondary alcohols (after addition of acid) 

The rest of this page is available to MOC Members only.
To get access to this page, plus over 1500 quizzes, the Reaction Encyclopedia, Org 1 / Org 2 summary sheets, and flashcards, sign up here for only 30 cents/ day!

 

 

Comments

Comment section

7 thoughts on “Addition of NaBH4 to ketones to give secondary alcohols

  1. how come on the 4th example the alkene isn’t turned into an ether as it reacts with methanol

    1. The hydride in NaH behaves like a strong base rather than a nucleophile. Since hydride is so small, it’s not polarizable and therefore not nucleophilic. BH4- is nucleophilic.

  2. Does nabh4 also give conjugated nucleophillic addition reaction with alpha beta unsaturated ketone?

    1. It can; you might find this to be somewhat textbook dependent. In practice, it can go either way. To get addition to occur exclusively on the carbonyl carbon, sometimes cerium trichloride is used. Google “Luche reduction”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.