From Wikidoc - Reading time: 2 min
A homologation reaction, also known as homologization, is any chemical reaction that effects an overall increase of the carbon skeleton of a saturated reactant molecule.[1] The reactants undergo a homologation converting them into the next member of the homologous series. For example the reaction of aldehydes and ketones with diazomethane or methoxymethylenetriphenylphosphine effectively inserts a methylene (-CH2-) unit in the hydrocarbon chain and the reaction product is the next homologue.
Examples of homologation reactions include:
Some reactions increase the chain length by more than one unit. For example, the following are considered two-carbon homologation reactions: