Intramolecular Aldol Reaction
When a molecule contains two carbonyl groups, it can react with itself! Master the rules of ring stability, regioselectivity, and the classic JEE "Keto-Aldehyde" trap.
π 1. The Ring Size Rule
Thermodynamics dictates the product. 5- and 6-membered rings are highly stable and will form exclusively. 3-, 4-, and 7-membered rings are too strained and will NOT form as major products.
π― 2. Chemo-selectivity
If the molecule has both an Aldehyde and a Ketone, the enolate will preferentially attack the Aldehyde. Aldehydes are more electrophilic and less sterically hindered than ketones.
π₯ 3. Spontaneous Dehydration
Because the resulting cyclic $\beta$-hydroxy carbonyl is highly prone to dehydration (forming a stable conjugated ring system), the final product is almost always the $\alpha,\beta$-unsaturated cyclic carbonyl.
Classic Mechanism: 2,5-Hexanedione
⚠️ The JEE Numbering Hack
To avoid drawing the wrong ring size or putting substituents on the wrong carbons, always number your chain!
- Identify the two carbonyls. Find all possible acidic alpha-hydrogens.
- Count the carbons from the alpha-hydrogen to the carbonyl carbon it will attack.
- Discard any paths that lead to a 3-, 4-, or 7-membered ring.
- If you have a choice between a 5- and 6-membered ring, both are viable, but attacking an Aldehyde takes absolute priority over attacking a Ketone.
- Draw a blank hexagon/pentagon. Number its corners exactly matching your chain path. Add the leftover groups (methyls, etc.) to their respective numbered corners. Finally, draw the double bond between the attacking alpha-carbon and the attacked carbonyl carbon.
Classic JEE Examples
Path A: C7 methyl attacks Aldehyde at C1 $\rightarrow$ forms a 7-membered ring. (Fails due to strain).
Path B: C2 alpha-H attacks Ketone at C6 $\rightarrow$ forms a 5-membered ring.
Path C: C5 alpha-H attacks Aldehyde at C1 $\rightarrow$ forms a 5-membered ring.
Conclusion: Path C is the major product because the enolate prefers to attack the more electrophilic Aldehyde. The ring contains carbons 1,2,3,4,5. The intact acetyl group $\ce{-CO-CH3}$ is left hanging off C5!