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Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC PDF Download

Introduction

  • Sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is a convenient source of hydride ion (H-) for the reduction of aldehydes and ketones.
  • Aldehydes are reduced to primary alcohols and ketones are reduced to secondary alcohols.
  • Esters (including lactones) and amides are not reduced.
  • As a source of hydride ion, NaBH4 will also act as a strong base, deprotonating water, alcohols, and carboxylic acids.
  • NaBH4 also sees use in the reduction of organomercury bonds after oxymercuration reactions.

Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4)

  • Sodium borohydride (NaBH4) can be made through the addition of sodium hydride (NaH) to our old friend borane in an appropriately chosen solvent.   We generally don’t think of the hydride ion (NaH) as being a very good nucleophile, but the empty p-orbital of BH3 makes this addition much easier.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • In contrast to BH3, which is a highly air-sensitive liquid requiring special inert-atmosphere (Schlenk line) techniques, sodium borohydride NaBH4 is a white crystalline solid generally dispensed in the form of pellets, very easily handled and weighed on the benchtop.
  • It’s worth a reminder about the properties of the B-H bond because this can be a common source of confusion.
  • NaBH4 has a tetrahedral arrangement of hydrogen atoms about the central boron atom, and a formal charge of -1 on the boron.
  • That negative charge on boron does not represent a lone pair on boron, however!
  • Because hydrogen is more electronegative (2.20) than boron (2.04) the electrons in the B–H bond are polarized towards the hydrogen.
  • So where are the electrons, if they’re not on the boron?
  • They’re on the hydrogens!Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • True to its name,  sodium borohydride acts as a source of hydride ion, H(-).
  • You may recall that hydride is the conjugate base of hydrogen (H2) (pKa about 36), making it a very strong base. NaBH4 reacts with water and other weak acids (such as methanol) to generate hydrogen gas (H2).

Question for Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 )
Try yourself:
What is the product obtained when a ketone is reduced with NaBH4?
View Solution
 

NaBH4 For The Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones

  • The most important reaction of NaBH4 is its use in the reduction of aldehydes and ketones to give alcohols.
  • The reduction of  aldehydes with sodium borohydride gives primary alcohols.   Note the bonds that form and break here – a new C-H bond is formed, and a C-O (pi) is broken. An additional O-H bond forms during during a workup step with mild acid.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • The reduction of ketones follows a similar pattern, and results in the formation of secondary alcohols.  A C-H bond is formed and a C–O (pi) bond is broken.
  • Note that if the two R groups flanking the C=O bond are different, a new chiral center will be created. In the case of a simple ketone such as acetophenone (phenyl methyl ketone) this will result in a racemic mixture.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • If the molecule already contains one or more stereogenic centers, a mixture of diastereomers will form. One notable example is the reduction of the bicyclic ketone [2.2.1]bicycloheptanone (above). Addition of the hydride ion occurs preferentially from the least hindered face (where there is only one bridging carbon) to give an 86:14 ratio of diastereomers.
  • Chiral reducing agents similar in reactivity to NaBH4 have been developed that are capable of performing enantioselective reductions of ketones. One prominent example is the CBS (Corey-Bakshi-Shibata) family of reagents.

Question for Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 )
Try yourself:
Which functional group is NOT generally reduced by NaBH4?
View Solution
 

Mechanism for the Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones With NaBH4

  • The mechanism for these reductions follows the very common two-step addition-protonation pattern often found in reactions of aldehydes and ketones.
  • The first step in this reaction is nucleophilic addition to the carbonyl carbon. Forming a C-H bond and breaking a C–O (pi) bond.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • The addition is followed by protonation of the oxygen with a mild acid (leading to the formation of O–H).
  • In practice, this reaction is usually performed in an alcoholic solvent like CH3OH and the reaction is quenched with a mild acid such as a saturated solution of ammonium chloride (NH4Cl).

NaBH4 Will Not Reduce Esters or Amides


  • NaBH4 will not generally reduce esters or amides.
  • This reaction can be done by LiAlH4, however.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

Why are esters and amides so unreactive? After all, shouldn’t these functional groups be more reactive than aldehydes and ketones since the carbonyl is attached to the electronegative oxygen and nitrogen atoms?

It’s actually the opposite! The lone pairs from oxygen and nitrogen are capable of donating electron density to the carbonyl carbon through forming a pi bond. This makes the carbonyl carbon less electrophilic and less reactive with nucleophiles.
Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

What about anhydrides and acid halides?

NaBH4 will reduce anhydrides and acid halides, but in practice, these functional groups will react with the solvent (CH3OH) before they have a chance to react with NaBH4.

Reduction of Hemiacetals

  • Aldehydes and ketones, check. Esters and amides, no go. So what else can be reduced by sodium borohydride.
  • The molecule below might look familiar. It’s glucose!
  • When treated with NaBH4, glucose is reduced to the alcohol sorbitol. 

Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

Hold on for a second. What happened here? There’s no aldehyde or ketone.  Or is there? 

  • There actually is an aldehyde present here, but it is in equilibrium with a cyclic hemiacetal. (In cyclic molecules such as sugars, this equilibrium process is known as ring-chain tautomerism.)
  • Although the open-chain aldehyde form only comprises 0.02% of an aqueous mixture of glucose at equilibrium, NaBH4 will quickly reduce any aldehyde that is present to give sorbitol.  Via Le Chatelier’s principle, equilibrium between the cyclic hemiacetal and the aldehyde will eventually result in all of the cyclic hemiacetal being reduced to the alcohol.

Reduction of Organomercury Compounds

  • There’s one more use of NaBHworth noting.
  • You may recall that alkenes can undergo oxymercuration when treated with water (or alcohols) in the presence of mercuric acetate Hg(OAc)2 or similar which results in net Markovnikov addition of water to an alkene.
    Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC
  • The resulting organomercury compound can then be treated with NaBH4 to give an alcohol.
  • The precise details of this “demercuration” step are often skipped over, but for completeness we’ll briefly go through it here.
  • The first step is addition of hydride to mercury, giving NaOAc and a new Hg-H bond. Carbon-mercury bonds are extremely weak (this is part of the reason why organomercury compounds are extremely toxic) and upon homolytic cleavage of Hg-C, the resulting carbon radical is then reduced with Hg-H to give C-H and metallic mercury (Hg0). On large enough scale, this results in a little puddle of mercury forming at the bottom of the reaction flask.Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

Summary

  • Sodium borohydride will reduce aldehydes to primary alcohols and ketones to secondary alcohols.
  • This proceeds via a two-step mechanism consisting of 1) nucleophilic addition, followed by 2) protonation.
  • Esters and amides are not reduced by NaBHunder normal conditions. (They can be reduced by lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4) however).
  • NaBH4 is also used in the demercuration step of oxymercuration-demercuration.
The document Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) | Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC is a part of the UPSC Course Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC.
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FAQs on Sodium Borohydride (NaBH4 ) - Chemistry Optional Notes for UPSC

1. What is the role of sodium borohydride (NaBH4) in the reduction of aldehydes and ketones?
Ans. Sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is a commonly used reducing agent in organic chemistry. It is used to reduce aldehydes and ketones to their corresponding alcohols. NaBH4 donates a hydride ion (H-) to the carbonyl group, resulting in the formation of an alkoxide intermediate. The alkoxide intermediate then undergoes protonation to give the alcohol product.
2. Can NaBH4 reduce esters or amides?
Ans. No, sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is not capable of reducing esters or amides. This is because the carbonyl group in esters and amides is less reactive compared to aldehydes and ketones. Stronger reducing agents, such as lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4), are required to reduce these functional groups.
3. What happens when NaBH4 is used to reduce hemiacetals?
Ans. Hemiacetals are functional groups that contain both an alcohol and an aldehyde or ketone group. When sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is used to reduce hemiacetals, it selectively reduces the carbonyl group to form a primary alcohol. The alcohol component of the hemiacetal remains unchanged.
4. Can NaBH4 be used to reduce organomercury compounds?
Ans. Yes, sodium borohydride (NaBH4) can be used to reduce organomercury compounds. The hydride ion (H-) from NaBH4 can transfer to the mercury atom, leading to the formation of an alkyl group and the reduction of the mercury to a lower oxidation state.
5. What are the limitations of using NaBH4 as a reducing agent?
Ans. While sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is a versatile reducing agent, it has some limitations. It is not able to reduce functional groups such as esters and amides. Additionally, NaBH4 is not effective for reducing highly hindered or sterically crowded ketones. In these cases, stronger reducing agents or alternative reduction methods may be required.
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