A description applied to a
chemical species whose
molecular entities each possess two alternative and strongly interacting distinguishable reactive centres,
to either of which a
bond may be made in a reaction: the centres must be connected in such a way that reaction
at either site stops or greatly retards subsequent attack at the second site. The
term is most commonly applied to
conjugated nucleophiles, for example the enolate ion:
(which may react with
electrophiles either at the β-carbon atom or at oxygen) or γ-pyridones, and also to the vicinally
ambident cyanide ion, cyanate ion, thiocyanate ion, sulfinate ion, nitrite ion and
unsymmetrical
hydrazines. Ambident electrophiles are exemplified by carboxylic
estersRC(=O)OCR3
which react with nucleophiles either at the carbonyl carbon or the alkoxy carbon.
Molecular entities, such as
dianions of dicarboxylic acids, containing two non-interacting (or feebly interacting) reactive
centres, are not generally considered to be ambident and are better described as '
bifunctional'. The Latin root of the word implies two reactive centres, but the term has in the
past also incorrectly been applied to chemical species with more than two reactive
centres. For such species the existing term '
polydent' (or, better, '
multident') is more appropriate.
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 1077
(Glossary of terms used in physical organic chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1994))
on page 1082
InChI=1/C5H10O/c1-4(2)5(3)6/h6H,1-3H3/p-1/fC5H9O/h6h/q-1
InChI=1/C5H9O/c1-4(2)5(3)6/h1-3H3/q-1
BZAZNULYLRVMSW-IHMYHLIPCZ
LJUOKTRAVLWETJ-UHFFFAOYAH