I am trying to convert an bromoalkane into an idodoalkane, and I came across a procedure called the "Finkelstein reaction".
In short: You dissolve NaI in acetone together with your bromo (or chloro or fluoro)-alkane, and use the fact that, unlike NaI, the NaBr, NaCl and NaF salts aren't soluble in acetone, which drives the reaction to completion. I tried to find out what the exact reaction conditions are so I know temperature, reaction time, etc..., but the only information I could find is from this paper:
The facile preparation of alkenyl metathesis synthons
T. W. Baughman, J. C. Sworen, K. B. Wagener, Tetrahedron, 2004, 60, 10943-10948.
In it, they use 1.7 eqiv. NaI for their chloroalkene, and run the reaction at reflux for.... THREE DAYS!! (Yield: 89%)
Ok, granted, they use a haloalkane not a haloalkane, and a chlorinated one at that, not a brominated one, but three days?? That seems extraordinarily long for such a simple reaction...
Maybe periodically interrupting the reaction and filtering off the insoluble KBr precipitate would slightly speed up the reaction, by shifting the equilibrium? This might also provide a way to monitor how far the reaction has progressed, since once 1.0 equiv KBr is collected, the reaction should be done.
So I was wondering if anyone here has ever tried this reaction with a bromoalkane, instead of a chloroalkene, and what reaction conditions were used? Also, I only have KI, but I'm guessing that shouldn't make a difference?
Thank you.