Bamford–Stevens reaction
| Bamford–Stevens reaction | |
|---|---|
| Named after | William Randall Bamford  Thomas Stevens Stevens  | 
| Reaction type | Elimination reaction | 
| Identifiers | |
| Organic Chemistry Portal | bamford-stevens-reaction | 
| RSC ontology ID | RXNO:0000124 | 
The Bamford–Stevens reaction is a chemical reaction whereby treatment of tosylhydrazones with strong base gives alkenes. It is named for the British chemist William Randall Bamford and the Scottish chemist Thomas Stevens Stevens (1900–2000). The usage of aprotic solvents gives predominantly Z-alkenes, while protic solvent gives a mixture of E- and Z-alkenes. As an alkene-generating transformation, the Bamford–Stevens reaction has broad utility in synthetic methodology and complex molecule synthesis.
The treatment of tosylhydrazones with alkyl lithium reagents is called the Shapiro reaction.