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Nitroalkanes are aliphatic organic compounds containing a nitro group bonded to an sp³ carbon (R–NO₂). The strongly electron-withdrawing –NO₂ group makes them polar and gives their α-hydrogens unusually high acidity.
Nitroethane C2H5NO2 [ CAS: 79-24-3 ] - 1000ml 1L
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Nitroethane C2H5NO2 [ CAS: 79-24-3 ] - 500ml
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Nitroalkanes feature the nitro functional group best represented by resonance forms R–N⁺(=O)–O⁻, producing a highly polarized substituent with strong −I and −M effects. This polarization increases the stability of adjacent carbanions and is responsible for the distinctive α-acidic character of nitroalkanes: deprotonation yields a resonance-stabilized nitronate (or aci-nitro) anion. Typical pKₐ values are ~9–11 for simple nitroalkanes, far lower than alkanes and comparable to many carbonyl-adjacent systems, enabling them to act as carbon-nucleophile equivalents in synthesis.
Preparation. Nitroalkanes are commonly formed by nucleophilic substitution of primary alkyl halides with nitrite/cyanate-like reagents favoring C-attack, or by radical nitration of alkanes under controlled conditions. They can also arise via oxidation of amines or related nitrogen-containing precursors in specialized routes. Product distributions depend on substrate structure and reaction regime (ionic vs radical).
Reactivity.
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Nitroaldol (Henry) reaction: nitronate anions add to aldehydes/ketones to give β-nitro alcohols, which may dehydrate to nitroalkenes.
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Michael addition: nitronates add 1,4- to activated alkenes, furnishing γ-nitro carbonyl frameworks after further steps.
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Nef reaction: conversion of nitronate salts to carbonyl compounds (aldehydes/ketones) under oxidative or acidic conditions, so the nitro group can function as a masked carbonyl.
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Reduction: nitroalkanes reduce to amines through nitroso/hydroxylamine intermediates; chemoselectivity is tunable with catalyst and conditions.
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α-Functionalization: because nitronates are ambident nucleophiles, α-substitution (e.g., alkylation) is feasible, followed by downstream transformations.
Spectroscopic signatures and properties. Nitroalkanes show two intense IR N–O stretches (asymmetric ~1520–1560 cm⁻¹; symmetric ~1340–1380 cm⁻¹). The nitro group deshields neighboring nuclei in NMR, and their sizable dipole moments raise boiling points relative to comparable hydrocarbons.
Overall, nitroalkanes are electronically activated aliphatic building blocks whose α-acidity and redox versatility make them key intermediates for constructing C–C and C–N bonds and for accessing carbonyl and amine products.