'Furan', also known as 'furane' and 'furfuran', is a
heterocyclic organic compound. It is typically derived by the thermal decomposition of
pentose-containing materials, cellolosic solids especially pine-wood. Furan is a colorless,
flammable, highly
volatile liquid with a
boiling point close to room temperature. It is
toxic and may be
carcinogenic. Catalytic hydrogenation (see
redox) of furan with a
palladium catalyst gives
tetrahydrofuran.
Furan is
aromatic because one of the
lone pairs of
electrons on the oxygen atom is
delocalized into the ring, creating a 4n+2 aromatic system (see
Hückel's rule) similar to
benzene. Because of the aromaticity, the molecule is flat and lacks discrete
double bonds. The other lone pair of electrons of the oxygen atom extends in the plane of the flat ring system. The
sp2 hybridization is to allow one of the lone pairs of oxygen to reside in a
p orbital and thus allow it to interact within the pi-system.
The name ''furan'' comes from the Latin ''furfur'', which means
bran.
[1] The first furan derivative to be described was
2-furoic acid, by
Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1780. Another important derivative,
furfural, was reported by
Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner in 1831 and characterised nine years later by
John Stenhouse. Furan itself was first prepared by
Heinrich Limpricht in 1870, although he called it ''tetraphenol''.
[2][3]
Synthesis and isolation
★ Furan can be obtained from
furfural by oxidation and
decarboxylation of the resulting furan-2-carboxylic acid, the furfural being derived by destructive distillation of corn cobs in the presence of
sulfuric acid.
[4]
★ A classic furan
organic synthesis is the
Feist-Benary synthesis.
★ One of the most simple synthesis methods for furans is the reaction of
1,4-diketones with
phosphorus pentoxide (P
2O
5) in the
Paal-Knorr Synthesis. It is interesting that the
thiophene formation reaction of 1,4-diketones with
Lawesson's reagent also forms furans as side products.
Reactions
Due to its aromaticity, furan's behavior is quite dissimilar to that of the more typical heterocyclic
ethers such as
tetrahydrofuran. It is considerably more reactive than
benzene in
electrophilic substitution reactions. Furan serves as a
diene in
Diels-Alder reactions with electron-deficient
dienophiles such as ethyl (E)-3-nitroacrylate.
[5] The reaction product is a mixture of isomers with preference for the
endo isomer:
:

Furan Diels-Alder reaction with ethyl (E)-3-nitroacrylate
Hydrogenation of furans affords sequentially dihydrofurans and
tetrahydrofurans.
See also
★
2,5-Dimethylfuran, a furan derivative which may be a possible
biofuel
★
Tetrahydrofuran (THF), the fully
hydrogenated analog of furan and a common
solvent.
★
Pyrrole, the
nitrogen analog of furan.
★
Thiophene, the
sulfur analog of furan.
★
Selenophene, the
selenium analog of furan.
★
Tellurophene, the
tellurium analog of furan.
★
Benzofuran, furan with a fused benzene ring.
★
Dibenzofuran, a compound class similar to dibenzo
dioxins.
★
Simple aromatic rings
References
1. Alexander Senning. ''Elsevier's Dictionary of Chemoetymology''. Elsevier, '2006'. ISBN 0444522395.
2.
Ueber das Tetraphenol C4H4O, H. Limpricht, , , Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft, 1870
3. Ernest Harry Rodd. ''Chemistry of Carbon Compounds: A Modern Comprehensive Treatise''. Elsevier, 1971.
4. Wilson, W. C. "Furan" Organic Syntheses, Collected Volume 1, p.274 (1941).
http://www.orgsyn.org/orgsyn/pdfs/CV1P0274.pdf
5. The oxanorbornene approach to 3-hydroxy, 3,4-dihydroxy and 3,4,5-trihydroxy derivatives of 2-aminocyclohexanecarboxylic acid, Masesane I, Batsanov A, Howard J, Modal R, Steel P, , , Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2006
External links
★
Computational Chemistry Wiki
★
Recent synthetic methods