Alcohols and Phenols

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Alcohols and Phenols

Alcohols and Phenols

Chapter 17 Part 1

„ Alcohols contain an OH group connected to a

saturated C (sp3) „ They are important solvents and synthesis intermediates „ Enols also contain an group connected to an unsaturated C (sp3) „ Phenols contain an OH group connected to a carbon in a benzene ring

OH an enol

Alcohols and Phenols „ Methanol, CH3OH, called methyl alcohol, is a

common solvent, a fuel additive, produced in large quantities „ Ethanol, CH3CH2OH, called ethyl alcohol, is a solvent, fuel, beverage „ Phenol, C6H5OH (“phenyl alcohol”) has diverse uses - it gives its name to the general class of compounds

Methanol CO + 2 H2

400oC ZnO/Cr2O3

CH3OH

„ Converted to formaldehyde for the

manufacture of resins and plastics

„ Also used as a solvent, as an antifreeze, and

as a fuel

„ Colorless liquid, B.P. = 65°C, and is miscible

with water

„ Poisonous

Ethanol C6H12O6

Isopropyl alcohol

yeast

H2C CH2 +

H2O

OH

2 CH3CH2OH + 2 CO2 H2SO4

CH3CHCH3 CH3CH2OH

„ Colorless liquid, B.P. =78°C, and is miscible „ Colorless liquid, B.P. =78°C, and is miscible

with water „ Used as a solvent or chemical intermediate.

with water „ Used as a solvent

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17.1 Naming Alcohols

IUPAC Rules for Naming Alcohols

„ General classifications of alcohols based on

„ Select the longest carbon chain containing the

substitution on C to which OH is attached

hydroxyl group, and derive the parent name by replacing the -e ending of the corresponding alkane with -ol „ Number the chain from the end nearer the hydroxyl group „ Number substituents according to position on chain, listing the substituents in alphabetical order

Many Alcohols Have Common Names „ These are accepted by IUPAC

Give the IUPAC names for these compounds: OH OH

Br

Draw the following structures: „2 H

OH H

Ethyl- 2 - buten- 1 - ol Cyclohexen - -1 ol „ trans - 3 - Chlorocycloheptanol „ 1,4 - Pentanediol „3 -

HO OH

OH H3C

CH3

2

Naming Phenols „ Use “phene” (the French name for benzene)

as the parent hydrocarbon name, not benzene „ Name substituents on aromatic ring by their position from OH

17.2 Properties of Alcohols and Phenols: Hydrogen Bonding

Alcohols Form Hydrogen Bonds

„ The structure around O of the alcohol or phenol is

„ A positively polarized OH hydrogen atom

similar to that in water, sp3 hybridized „ Alcohols and phenols have much higher boiling points than similar alkanes and alkyl halides

from one molecule is attracted to a lone pair of electrons on a negatively polarized oxygen atom of another molecule „ This produces a force that holds the two molecules together „ These intermolecular attractions are present in solution but not in the gas phase, thus elevating the boiling point of the solution

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17.3 Properties of Alcohols and Phenols: Acidity and Basicity

Alchols and Phenols are Weak Brønsted Acids

„ Weakly basic and weakly acidic „ Alcohols are weak Brønsted bases „ Protonated by strong acids to yield oxonium ions,

„ Can transfer a proton to water to a very small

ROH2+

extent „ Produces H3O+ and an alkoxide ion, RO−, or

a phenoxide ion, ArO−

Brønsted Acidity Measurements The acidity constant, Ka, measure the extent to which a Brønsted acid transfers a proton to water

Ka =

[A − ][H3O + ] [HA]

and pKa = −log Ka

„ Relative acidities are more conveniently presented on

a logarithmic scale, pKa, which is directly proportional to the free energy of the equilibrium „ Differences in pKa correspond to differences in free energy „ Table 17.1 presents a range of acids and their pKa values

Relative Acidities of Alcohols „ Simple alcohols are about as acidic as water „ Alkyl groups make an alcohol a weaker acid „ The more easily the alkoxide ion is solvated

by water the more its formation is energetically favored „ Steric effects are important

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Inductive Effects

Generating Alkoxides from Alcohols

„ Electron-withdrawing groups make an alcohol a

„ Alcohols are weak acids – requires a strong

stronger acid by stabilizing the conjugate base (alkoxide)

base to form an alkoxide such as NaH, sodium amide NaNH2, and Grignard reagents (RMgX)

„ Alkoxides are bases used as reagents in

organic chemistry

CH3OH

Methanol

+ NaH

CH3CH2OH + NaNH2 Ethanol

Phenol Acidity „ Phenols (pKa ~10) are much more acidic than

OH CH3CHCH3 + CH3Li

alcohols (pKa ~ 16) due to resonance stabilization of the phenoxide ion

Isopropyl alcohol

„ Phenols react with NaOH solutions (but alcohols do

+ CH3MgBr

OH

not), forming soluble salts that are soluble in dilute aqueous

Cyclohexanol

CH3 CH3 C OH

+

CH3 tert-Butyl alcohol

„ A phenolic component can be separated from an

2K

organic solution by extraction into basic aqueous solution and is isolated after acid is added to the solution

Substituted Phenols „ Can be more or less acidic than phenol itself „ An electron-withdrawing substituent makes a phenol

more acidic by delocalizing the negative charge „ Phenols with an electron-donating substituent are

less acidic because these substituents concentrate the charge

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Nitro-Phenols

Consider:

„ Phenols with nitro groups at the ortho and para

„p -

positions are much stronger acids „ The pKa of 2,4,6-trinitrophenol is 0.6, a very strong acid

Nitrobenzyl alcohol is more acidic than benzyl alcohol. Explain.

17.4 Preparation of Alchols: an Overview

Review: Preparation of Alcohols by Regiospecific Hydration of Alkenes

„ Alcohols are derived from many types of compounds „ The alcohol hydroxyl can be converted to many other

„ Hydroboration/oxidation: syn, non-Markovnikov

functional groups „ This makes alcohols useful in synthesis

hydration

„ Oxymercuration/reduction: Markovnikov hydration

Preparation of 1,2-Diols „ Review: Cis 1,2-diols from hydroxylation of an alkene

with OsO4 followed by reduction with NaHSO3 „ In Chapter 18: Trans-1,2-diols from acid-catalyzed

hydrolysis of epoxides

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17.5 Alcohols from Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds

Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones

„ Reduction of a carbonyl compound in general gives

„ Aldehydes gives primary alcohols

an alcohol „ Note that organic reduction reactions add the equivalent of H2 to a molecule

Catalytic Hydrogenation: O RCH aldehyde

Reduction Reagent: Sodium Borohydride „ NaBH4 is not sensitive to moisture and it does not

+

H2

Pt, Pd or Ni

reduce other common functional groups

RCH2OH primary alcohol

O Pt, Pd or Ni RCR' + H2 ketone

„ Ketones gives secondary alcohols

„ Lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4) is more powerful,

less specific, and very reactive with water

„ Both add the equivalent of “H-”

OH RCHR' secondary alcohol

Mechanism of Reduction „ The reagent adds the equivalent of hydride to the

carbon of C=O and polarizes the group as well

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O CH

O

1. NaBH4, ethanol

?

2. H3O

O2N

CH3CCH2C(CH3)3

1. NaBH4, ethanol

?

2. H3O 4,4-Dimethyl-2-pentanone

m-Nitrobenzaldehyde

O CH3(CH2)5CH Heptanal

O 1. LiAlH4, ether 2. H3O

?

(C6H5)2CHCCH3

1. LiAlH4, ether

?

2. H3O 1,1-Diphenyl-2-propanone

Reduction of Carboxylic Acids and Esters „ Carboxylic acids and esters are reduced to give

primary alcohols

COOH

„ LiAlH4 is used because NaBH4 is not effective

1. LiAlH4, ether

?

2. H3O

cyclopropanecarboxylic acid

Note: the aluminum hydride places two hydrogens on the carbonyl carbon and the acid (or water) is the source of the hydrogen on the hydroxyl group.

Which reagent would you use to accomplish each of the following reactions? O

O

COCH2CH3 1. LiAlH4, ether 2. H3O

O

?

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

OH

O

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

?

ethyl benzoate

O

O

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

?

OH CH3CCH2CH2CH2OH

Note: The reduction of esters yields two alcohols

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What carbonyl compounds give the following alcohols on reduction with LiAlH4? CH2OH

OH CHCH3

Problem: „ Give the structure of an ester that will yield a

mixture containing equal amounts of - propanol and 2 1 - propanol on the reduction with lithium aluminum hydride.

OH H

(CH3)2CHCH2OH

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