In organic chemistry, methylenation is a chemical reaction that inserts a methylene (−CH2−) group into a chemical compound:
In a related sense, it also describes a process in which a divalent group of a starting material is removed and replaced with a terminal CH2 group:
Methylenation in this context is also known as methenylation. Most commonly, E is an oxygen atom, so that the reaction results in terminal alkenes from aldehydes and ketones, or more rarely, enol ethers from esters or enamines from amides.