The reaction was named after Karl Wilhelm Rosenmund who together with his Ph.D. student Erich Struck discovered in 1914 that aryl halide reacts with alcohol water solution of potassium cyanide and catalytic amounts of cuprous cyanide at 200 °C. The reaction yields the carboxylic acid, not the nitrile, but Rosenmund speculated that the intermediate should be the nitrile, since nitriles on aromatic rings can react to form carboxylic acids.[1] Independently Alfred Pongratz[4] and Julius von Braun [de][2] improved the reaction by changing the reaction conditions to higher temperatures and used no solvent for the reaction. Further improvement of the reaction was done in the following years,[5] for example the use of ionic liquids as solvent for the reaction.[6]
^ abv. Braun, Julius; Manz, Gottfried (1931). "Fluoranthen und seine Derivate. III. Mitteilung". Justus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie. 488 (1): 111–126. doi:10.1002/jlac.19314880107.
^E. Callen, Joseph; A. Dornfeld, Clinton; H. Coleman, George (1948). "9-CYANOPHENANTHRENE". Organic Syntheses. 28 (28): 34. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.028.0034.
^Pongratz, Alfred (July 1927). "Untersuchungen über Perylen und seine Derivate". Monatshefte für Chemie. 48 (7): 585–591. doi:10.1007/BF01518076. S2CID197767053.
^KOELSCH, C. F.; WHITNEY, A. G. (November 1941). "THE ROSENMUND-von BRAUN NITRILE SYNTHESIS". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 06 (6): 795–803. doi:10.1021/jo01206a002.
^Wu, Jeff Xin; Beck, Brandon; Ren, Rex X. (January 2002). "Catalytic Rosenmund–von Braun reaction in halide-based ionic liquids". Tetrahedron Letters. 43 (3): 387–389. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(01)02168-2.