Potassium tert-butoxide is a sterically hindered, non-nucleophilic strong base widely used in organic and biochemical synthesis. Its high basicity (pKa ~17) combined with strong steric hindrance makes it particularly effective for selective deprotonation reactions, E2 eliminations, and protecting group manipulations while minimizing undesired nucleophilic substitution reactions. These characteristics make it a valuable reagent in synthetic chemistry and in the study of complex biochemical pathways.
Chemical Properties
Potassium tert-butoxide (KOtBu or (CH₃)₃COK; molecular weight 112.21 g/mol) is obtained as a white to off-white hygroscopic solid with a decomposition melting point of approximately 256–258°C and a density of about 0.91 g/mL. Structurally, it forms tetrameric cubane-type clusters [{(CH₃)₃COK}₄] in which potassium ions bridge four tert-butoxide ligands through three-coordinate oxygen atoms. The compound is soluble in polar aprotic solvents such as THF and DMSO, where it forms solvent-separated ion pairs, but it remains poorly soluble in non-polar solvents.
Due to its strong basic character, potassium tert-butoxide reacts vigorously with water and other protic solvents, producing potassium hydroxide and tert-butanol while generating heat and isobutene gas. Consequently, the reagent must be handled under strictly anhydrous conditions in controlled laboratory environments.
Biochemical Applications
Potassium tert-butoxide is widely employed in advanced biochemical and synthetic biology applications. In polyketide biosynthesis studies, solutions of 1–2 M KOtBu in THF enable efficient deprotonation of β-ketoesters in acetoacetyl-CoA analogs, facilitating selective C-acylation reactions on acyl carrier protein (ACP)-bound intermediates.
In carbohydrate chemistry, the reagent is used for regioselective 2,6-di-O-silylation of mannose acceptors, where the bulky base prevents undesired migration at the 3 and 4 positions. Peptide synthesis protocols also employ anhydrous KOtBu for the removal of Fmoc protecting groups from sterically hindered residues or for Asp(OtBu) deprotection without inducing β-elimination side reactions. In nucleotide chemistry, the reagent enables the controlled generation of 5′-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-2′-deoxynucleosides under kinetic conditions.

