tetramethylation
Tetramethylation is the chemical process of introducing four methyl groups into a molecule. In organic synthesis, this term is used to describe substantial methylation that leads to highly methylated substrates, often with significant changes in sterics, hydrophobicity, and reactivity. The exact meaning can vary by context, but it generally refers to four separate methyl additions rather than a single, fourfold transfer in one step.
In aromatic chemistry, tetramethylation most commonly refers to forming tetramethylbenzenes, such as durene (1,2,4,5-tetramethylbenzene). This is
In nitrogen chemistry, tetramethylation often describes achieving four methyl substitutions on a nitrogen center to form
Overall, tetramethylation denotes the installation of four methyl groups, with practical implications depending on the substrate