Enol




In organic chemistry, enols are a type of functional group or intermediate in organic chemistry. Formally, enols are derivatives of vinyl alcohol, with a connectivity. The term enol is an abbreviation of alkenol, a portmanteau deriving from "-ene"/"alkene" and "-ol"/"alcohol".
Keto–enol tautomerism refers to a chemical equilibrium between a "keto" form and an enol. The tautomeric interconversion involves hydrogen atom movement and the reorganisation of bonding electrons.
Many kinds of enols are known, but very few are stable compounds. However, deprotonation of organic carbonyls gives enolate anions, which are important in organic reaction strategies as a strong nucleophile.

Enolization

s, ketones, and aldehydes with an α-hydrogen often form enols. The reaction involves migration of a proton from carbon to oxygen:
The process does not occur intramolecularly, but requires participation of solvent or other mediators.
Strictly speaking, the conversion is a keto-enol tautomerism only in the case of ketones. But this name is often more generally applied to all such tautomerizations.
The keto-enol equilibrium involves movement of a double bond. If the α position of an enol is substituted, then it is prochiral, forming a new stereocenter when in keto form. Conversely, enolization racemizes that stereocenter.

Occurrence and reactivity

Usually the tautomerization equilibrium constant is so small that the enol is undetectable spectroscopically. In the equilibrium between vinyl alcohol and acetaldehyde, K = / ≈ 5.8.
The terminus of the double bond in enols is nucleophilic, a property enhanced in the case of enolate anions. However, enolates protonate reversibly at the oxygen much faster than equilibrate to the ketone/aldehyde/etc. As many organic syntheses involve the controlled formation and reaction of enolates, enols appear transiently in great quantities during quenching.

Stable enols

Enols can be stabilized through vinylogy. Thus, very stable enols are phenols.
In compounds with two carbonyls, the enol form is also stabilized through intramolecular hydrogen bonding and becomes dominant. The behavior of 2,4-pentanedione illustrates this effect:
carbonylenolKenolization
Acetaldehyde
5.8
Acetone
5.12
Methyl acetate
4
Acetophenone
1
Acetylacetone
0.27
Trifluoroacetylacetone
32
Hexafluoroacetylacetone
~104
Cyclohexa-2,4-dienonePhenol
>1012

Phenols

s represent a kind of enol. For some phenols and related compounds, the keto tautomer plays an important role. Many of the reactions of resorcinol involve the keto tautomer, for example. Naphthalene-1,4-diol exists in observable equilibrium with the diketone tetrahydronaphthalene-1,4-dione.

Biochemistry

Keto–enol tautomerism is important in several areas of biochemistry.
The high phosphate-transfer potential of phosphoenolpyruvate results from the fact that the phosphorylated compound is "trapped" in the less thermodynamically favorable enol form, whereas after dephosphorylation it can assume the keto form.
The enzyme enolase catalyzes the dehydration of 2-phosphoglyceric acid to the enol phosphate ester. Metabolism of PEP to pyruvic acid by pyruvate kinase generates adenosine triphosphate via substrate-level phosphorylation.

Enediols

Enediols are alkenes with a hydroxyl group on each carbon of the C=C double bond. Normally such compounds are disfavored components in equilibria with acyloins. One special case is catechol, where the C=C subunit is part of an aromatic ring. In some other cases however, enediols are stabilized by flanking carbonyl groups. These stabilized enediols are called reductones. Such species are important in glycochemistry, e.g., the Lobry de Bruyn–Van Ekenstein transformation.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate is a key substrate in the Calvin cycle of photosynthesis. In the Calvin cycle, the ribulose equilibrates with the enediol, which then binds carbon dioxide. The same enediol is also susceptible to attack by oxygen in the process called photorespiration.