Organic Chemistry
Friedel-Crafts Reaction
Hang an alkyl or acyl group off a benzene ring
The Friedel-Crafts reaction installs alkyl or acyl groups onto aromatic rings using a Lewis acid catalyst (typically AlCl₃). It is the standard route to alkylbenzenes and aryl ketones, but it suffers from polyalkylation, carbocation rearrangements, and outright failure on electron-poor arenes.
- First reported1877 (Friedel & Crafts)
- MechanismElectrophilic aromatic substitution (SEAr)
- Typical Lewis acidAlCl₃, FeCl₃, BF₃
- SolventCS₂, CH₂Cl₂, nitrobenzene
- Two flavorsAlkylation / acylation
- Fails onStrongly deactivated arenes
Interactive visualization
Press play, or step through manually. The visualization is yours to drive — try it before reading on.
Watch the 60-second explainer
A condensed visual walkthrough — narrated, captioned, under a minute.
What Friedel-Crafts does
Both flavors of the reaction follow the standard electrophilic-aromatic-substitution playbook:
- Generate a strong electrophile. A Lewis acid (AlCl₃, FeCl₃) strips a halide from RCl (alkylation) or RC(=O)Cl (acylation), unmasking R⁺ or R-C≡O⁺.
- The arene attacks. The π electrons of benzene swing onto the cation, breaking aromaticity and forming an arenium ion (a cyclohexadienyl cation, also called the σ-complex).
- Deprotonate. A base — usually AlCl₄⁻ — pulls off the proton from the sp³ carbon, restoring aromaticity and regenerating the catalyst.
Ph-H + R-Cl ──AlCl₃──→ Ph-R + HCl
step 1: R-Cl + AlCl₃ → R⁺ + AlCl₄⁻
step 2: Ph-H + R⁺ → [arenium ion: H and R on same sp³ carbon]
step 3: arenium + AlCl₄⁻ → Ph-R + HCl + AlCl₃
Acylation differs only in step 1: AlCl₃ pulls Cl⁻ off RC(=O)Cl to give an acylium ion R-C≡O⁺, which is resonance-stabilized between R-C≡O⁺ and R-C⁺=O. This stability is the reason acylation is so well-behaved relative to alkylation.
Worked example: benzene + acetyl chloride
Make acetophenone, the workhorse aryl methyl ketone, by Friedel-Crafts acylation.
PhH + CH₃-C(=O)-Cl ──AlCl₃ (1.1 eq), CS₂, 0→25 °C, 2 h──→ Ph-C(=O)-CH₃
- Reagents. Benzene (solvent and reactant, large excess), acetyl chloride 1.0 equiv, AlCl₃ 1.1 equiv (slightly super-stoichiometric — the product complexes one equivalent of AlCl₃).
- Conditions. Carbon disulfide or dichloromethane, 0 °C addition then warm to 25 °C, 2-3 h.
- Workup. Quench cautiously with ice/HCl(aq), extract, wash with NaHCO₃, distill.
- Yield. 85-95% acetophenone, monoacylated only — the deactivated product won't react again under these conditions.
Note that the AlCl₃ is technically stoichiometric, not catalytic, in any acylation: the product ketone coordinates aluminum so tightly that you need at least one equivalent to keep going. This is why "Lewis-acid-catalyzed" Friedel-Crafts is a slight misnomer for acylations, even though the Lewis acid is regenerated as a free species in the alkylation flavor.
Alkylation vs Acylation
| Friedel-Crafts alkylation | Friedel-Crafts acylation | |
|---|---|---|
| Electrophile | R⁺ (free or tight ion pair) | R-C≡O⁺ (resonance-stabilized acylium) |
| Reagent | RCl, RBr, ROH, alkene + H⁺ | RC(=O)Cl, anhydride, RCOOH/H₃PO₄ |
| Catalyst loading | Catalytic AlCl₃ (5-10 mol%) | Stoichiometric AlCl₃ (≥ 1.0 equiv) |
| Carbocation rearrangement | Yes — common with primary halides | No — acylium is stable, doesn't rearrange |
| Polysubstitution | Yes — alkyl group activates the ring | No — acyl group deactivates the ring |
| Product directing effect | o,p-directing (next reaction) | m-directing (next reaction) |
| Works on benzene? | Yes | Yes |
| Works on nitrobenzene? | No (deactivated) | No (deactivated) |
| Works on aniline? | No (NH₂ poisons AlCl₃) | No (acylates the nitrogen first) |
| Most common use | Cumene (isopropylbenzene) for phenol manufacture | Aryl ketones, drug synthesis intermediates |
Real-world applications
- Cumene process (commercial phenol). Benzene + propene + solid acid catalyst (zeolite or H₃PO₄/SiO₂) gives cumene at ~90% selectivity. Cumene is then auto-oxidized and cleaved to phenol + acetone — the route that produces over 95% of the world's phenol (≈ 12 million tons/year).
- Commercial styrene. Friedel-Crafts ethylation of benzene gives ethylbenzene (≈ 30 million tons/year), which is then dehydrogenated over Fe₂O₃-K₂CO₃ at 600 °C to styrene — the monomer for polystyrene. Modern plants use solid-acid zeolites (ZSM-5) instead of AlCl₃, but the Friedel-Crafts mechanism is identical.
- Detergent alkylates. Linear alkylbenzenes (LAB) for biodegradable detergents come from Friedel-Crafts of benzene with C₁₀-C₁₃ olefins over a HF or zeolite catalyst. Worldwide production exceeds 3 million tons annually.
- Anthraquinone dye intermediates. Phthalic anhydride + benzene with AlCl₃ gives o-benzoylbenzoic acid, then cyclized with H₂SO₄ to anthraquinone — the parent of indigo carmine and alizarin dyes.
- Pharmaceuticals. Ibuprofen historically used a Friedel-Crafts acetylation of isobutylbenzene to install the C(=O)CH₃ group; modern routes (BHC process, 1992) replaced AlCl₃ with HF then a Pd-catalyzed carbonylation to cut waste.
Pitfall: alkylation rearrangements
Try to make n-propylbenzene from benzene + 1-chloropropane / AlCl₃ and the major product is cumene (isopropylbenzene), not n-propylbenzene. The free n-propyl cation is primary and unstable; a 1,2-hydride shift converts it to the secondary isopropyl cation before it can attack the ring:
CH₃CH₂CH₂-Cl + AlCl₃ → CH₃CH₂CH₂⁺ (primary, unstable)
|
| 1,2-H shift
v
(CH₃)₂CH⁺ (secondary, lower energy)
+
PhH
↓
Ph-CH(CH₃)₂ (cumene, ~80% of product mix)
The standard workaround: acylate first, reduce later. Use propanoyl chloride + AlCl₃ to install -C(=O)CH₂CH₃ (the propanoyl cation does not rearrange), then reduce the carbonyl to CH₂ with Clemmensen (Zn/Hg, HCl) or Wolff-Kishner (NH₂NH₂, KOH, hot ethylene glycol). The net result is clean n-propylbenzene in two steps from benzene.
Variants
- Friedel-Crafts with alkenes. Replace RCl with an alkene + a strong acid (HF, H₃PO₄, zeolite). Markovnikov protonation of the alkene gives the most stable cation, which then attacks the arene. Used industrially for cumene and ethylbenzene.
- Friedel-Crafts with alcohols. Protonate ROH to form ROH₂⁺, lose water to give R⁺. Convenient when the chloride is unavailable.
- Houben-Hoesch reaction. Acylation of activated arenes (phenols, polyhydroxyarenes) with a nitrile + HCl + ZnCl₂ — a Friedel-Crafts variant that delivers an iminium intermediate, hydrolyzed in workup to a ketone.
- Gattermann-Koch formylation. CO + HCl + AlCl₃ on benzene gives benzaldehyde (a "formyl" Friedel-Crafts) — a workaround for the fact that formyl chloride doesn't exist as a stable compound.
- Modern solid-acid catalysts. H-zeolites (ZSM-5, beta), heteropoly acids, sulfated zirconia. Recyclable, less corrosive, and avoid the chloride waste of AlCl₃.
- Asymmetric Friedel-Crafts. Chiral N,N′-dioxide-Sc(III) complexes or chiral phosphoric acids can drive enantioselective arylations of α,β-unsaturated ketones with electron-rich heterocycles (indoles, pyrroles).
Common pitfalls
- Aniline and pyrrole basicity. NH₂ groups complex AlCl₃ tightly, deactivating the catalyst and the ring. Protect amines as amides (acetanilide) before attempting Friedel-Crafts; the amide nitrogen is far less basic.
- Polyalkylation creep. Each alkyl group makes the ring more reactive. If you can't tolerate dialkyl side products, run with 5-10× excess benzene as solvent, or switch to acylation + reduction.
- Choice of solvent. CS₂ and CH₂Cl₂ are inert. Don't use ethers (Lewis bases that quench AlCl₃) or alcohols (protonate the catalyst).
- Moisture sensitivity. AlCl₃ hydrolyzes vigorously to Al(OH)₃ + HCl. Pre-dry glassware and reagents; quench by slow addition into ice water, never the other way.
- Choosing the wrong directing reference. The substituent that is already on the ring tells you where the new electrophile goes — alkyl groups are o,p-directors and ring-activators, acyl groups are m-directors and ring-deactivators. Plan multi-step syntheses with the eventual substitution pattern in mind.
Frequently asked questions
Why does Friedel-Crafts alkylation often give over-alkylation?
An alkyl group is electron-donating, so the first alkylation product is more reactive toward electrophilic attack than the starting benzene. The second alkylation often outpaces the first, giving dialkyl- and polyalkylbenzene mixtures. Industrial routes counter this by running with large excess of benzene, by using a less reactive electrophile, or by switching to acylation (which doesn't have this problem).
Why doesn't acylation give multiple products?
The acyl group (C=O) is electron-withdrawing — it deactivates the ring it just installed onto. The aryl ketone is significantly less reactive than the starting arene, so a second acylation is much slower. Stopping cleanly at monoacylation is the main practical reason chemists prefer acylation when possible.
Why does Friedel-Crafts fail on electron-poor arenes?
Strongly deactivating groups (NO₂, CN, CF₃, C=O, NR₃⁺) lower the energy of the ring's π HOMO. The Lewis-acid-activated electrophile cannot compete with the deactivation; the arenium ion intermediate is too unstable to form. Nitrobenzene and pyridinium salts are inert to Friedel-Crafts under standard conditions. Switch to nucleophilic aromatic substitution, directed metalation, or a transition-metal coupling instead.
Does Friedel-Crafts alkylation suffer from carbocation rearrangements?
Yes. The Lewis acid generates a free carbocation (or a tight ion pair behaving like one), which can undergo 1,2-hydride or methyl shifts before it attacks the ring. Attempting to install an n-propyl group with 1-chloropropane / AlCl₃ on benzene gives mostly cumene (isopropylbenzene), not n-propylbenzene. Acylation does not rearrange because the acylium ion is resonance-stabilized.
What does the Lewis acid actually do?
It abstracts the leaving group from the alkyl halide or acyl halide, creating a much stronger electrophile. With AlCl₃ + RCl, the chloride coordinates to aluminum (forming AlCl₄⁻) and the alkyl cation R⁺ is set free. With acyl chlorides, AlCl₃ pulls off Cl⁻ to give an acylium ion R-C≡O⁺. Without the Lewis acid, plain RCl or RC(=O)Cl is too weak an electrophile to attack benzene.
Why do chemists often use Friedel-Crafts acylation followed by Clemmensen reduction?
It is the standard workaround for installing a straight-chain alkyl group without rearrangement. Direct alkylation with a primary halide rearranges; instead, acylate first (no rearrangement, monoacylation) and then reduce the resulting ketone (Clemmensen with Zn/Hg/HCl, or Wolff-Kishner with hydrazine/KOH) to a CH₂ group. The two-step route gives clean n-alkyl arenes.