Nef reaction
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| Nef reaction | |
|---|---|
| Named after | John Ulric Nef |
| Reaction type | Substitution reaction |
| Identifiers | |
| Organic Chemistry Portal | nef-reaction |
| RSC ontology ID | RXNO:0000157 |
In organic chemistry, the Nef reaction is an organic reaction describing the acid hydrolysis of a salt of a primary or secondary nitroalkane (R−NO2) to an aldehyde (R−CH=O) or a ketone (R2C=O) and nitroxyl (HNO), which rapidly converts to nitrous oxide (N2O). The reaction has been the subject of several literature reviews.[1][2][3]

The reaction was reported in 1894 by the chemist John Ulric Nef,[4] who treated the sodium salt of nitroethane with sulfuric acid resulting in an 85–89% yield of nitrous oxide and at least 70% yield of acetaldehyde. However, the reaction was pioneered a year earlier in 1893 by Konovalov,[5] who converted the potassium salt of 1-phenylnitroethane with sulfuric acid to acetophenone.


