Lemieux‐Johnson Reagent

Lemieux‐Johnson Reagent / Lemieux–Johnson Oxidation

The Lemieux-Johnson reagent is a combination of osmium tetroxide (OsO4) and sodium periodate (NaIO4) used for oxidative cleavage of carbon-carbon double bonds in alkenes. This cleavage produces aldehydes or ketones, similar to the results of reductive ozonolysis. This is also known as Lemieux–Johnson oxidation.

Lemieux‐Johnson Reagent, Lemieux‐Johnson Reaction, Lemieux‐Johnson Oxidation

Mechanism of Lemieux–Johnson Oxidation

The reaction involves the formation of cyclic osmate ester, which undergoes oxidative cleavage with NaIO4 to give the dicarbonyl compounds

The reaction involves two steps:

Step-1: Dihydroxylation: OsO4 adds hydroxyl groups across the double bond (syn-addition), forming a 1,2-diol (cis-diol not trans-diol).

Mechansim of Lemieux‐Johnson Reagent Step-1

Step-2: Oxidative Cleavage: NaIO4 then cleaves the diol, forming the aldehydes or ketones.

Mechansim of Lemieux‐Johnson Reagent Step-2
X

Hi, Welcome to Maxbrain Chemistry.
Join Telegram Channel to get latest updates.
Join Now

Daily
Quiz

Admission Alert ⚠️

✦ B.Sc. All Semester


✦ CBSE:12th Complete Course Annual Exam 2026


✦ CBSE:12th Compartmental Exam July 2025


✦ NIOS:Sr. Secondary Complete Course October 2025


Complete Syllabus | PYQs | MCQs | Assignment


Online Class: 1st June 2025


Call or WhatsApp