How does it work on a ketone or aldehyde?
Uhm... I am lost
the book presents briefly a couple of very simple examples (none of which is ketone or aldehyde, in fact not even cyclic molecules).
Because of your insight I tried to do it myself and if I get a cyclohexanone to react with 1 equivalence of LiMe I believe the end result would be a 1-methyl-1-cyclohexanol (deprotonated, e.g. O
- instead of OH) which then it could be protonated (twice) protonated with H
+ and then add HBr to replace the OH group for a Br group.
But if that were to be the case then I am back to square one since the only reaction I know to get a ketone is addition of H
2O to an alkyne (and if I get an alkyne I think then the best path for the reaction is the one I proposed before, or it isent?)