Perkin Reaction


Perkin reaction

[′pər·kən rē‚ak·shən] (organic chemistry) The formation of unsaturated cinnamic-type acids by the condensation of aromatic aldehydes with fatty acids in the presence of acetic anhydride.

Perkin Reaction

 

a method of synthesizing β-arylacrylic acids (cinnamic acid and its derivatives and analogues) by reacting aromatic aldehydes with carboxylic acid anhydrides in the presence of a basic catalyst, such as alkali salts of carboxylic acids, carbonates of alkali metals, or tertiary amines:

The reaction was discovered by W. H. Perkin the Elder in 1868. It is widely used in organic chemistry. The synthesis of coumarin from salicylaldehyde and acetic anhydride is of commercial importance.

REFERENCE

Organicheskie reaktsii, collection 1. Moscow, 1948. Page 267. (Translated from English.)