Nucleophilic Addition to a Carbonyl Group
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18-10-2019
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Nucleophilic Addition to a Carbonyl Group
C=O is prone to additions and nucleophillic attack because or carbon's positive charge and oxygen's negative charge. The resonance of the carbon partial positive charge allows the negative charge on the nucleophile to attack the Carbonyl group and become a part of the structure and a positive charge (usually a proton hydrogen) attacks the oxygen. Just a reminder, the nucleophile is a good acid therefore "likes protons" so it will attack the side with a positive charge.

*Remember: due to the electronegative nature of oxygen the carbon is partially positive and oxygen is partially negative

- The Nucleophile (Nu) attacks the positively charged carbon and pushes one of the double bond electrons onto oxygen to give it a negative charge.
- The Nucleophile is now a part of the carbonl structure with a negatively cahrged oxygen and a Na+ "floating" around.
- The negatively charged oxygen attacks the proton (H+) to give the resulting product above.
Example
Because organometallic reagents react as their corresponding carbanion, they are excellent nucleophiles. The basic reaction involves the nucleophilic attack of the carbanionic carbon in the organometallic reagent with the electrophilic carbon in the carbonyl to form alcohols.
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