Alcohols and Phenols

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Alcohols and Phenols

Chapter 17 Part 1

Alcohols and Phenols „ 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

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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

yeast

H2C CH2 +

H2O

2 CH3CH2OH + 2 CO2 H2SO4

CH3CH2OH

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

with water „ Used as a solvent or chemical intermediate.

Isopropyl alcohol OH CH3CHCH3 „ Colorless liquid, B.P. =78°C, and is miscible

with water „ Used as a solvent

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17.1 Naming Alcohols „ General classifications of alcohols based on

substitution on C to which OH is attached

IUPAC Rules for Naming Alcohols „ Select the longest carbon chain containing the

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

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Many Alcohols Have Common Names „ These are accepted by IUPAC

Give the IUPAC names for these compounds: OH OH

Br

H

OH H

HO OH

OH H3C

CH3

Draw the following structures: „2 -

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

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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 „ The structure around O of the alcohol or phenol is

similar to that in water, sp3 hybridized „ Alcohols and phenols have much higher boiling

points than similar alkanes and alkyl halides

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Alcohols Form Hydrogen Bonds „ A positively polarized OH hydrogen atom

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

ROH2+

Alchols and Phenols are Weak Brønsted Acids „ Can transfer a proton to water to a very small

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

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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 „ Electron-withdrawing groups make an alcohol a

stronger acid by stabilizing the conjugate base (alkoxide)

Generating Alkoxides from Alcohols „ Alcohols are weak acids – requires a strong

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

OH CH3CHCH3 + CH3Li Isopropyl alcohol

+ CH3MgBr

OH Cyclohexanol

CH3 CH3 C OH

+

2K

CH3 tert-Butyl alcohol

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

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

„ Phenols react with NaOH solutions (but alcohols do

not), forming soluble salts that are soluble in dilute aqueous „ A phenolic component can be separated from an

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 „ Phenols with nitro groups at the ortho and para

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

acid

Consider: „p -

Nitrobenzyl alcohol is more acidic than benzyl alcohol. Explain.

17.4 Preparation of Alchols: an Overview „ Alcohols are derived from many types of compounds „ The alcohol hydroxyl can be converted to many other

functional groups

„ This makes alcohols useful in synthesis

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Review: Preparation of Alcohols by Regiospecific Hydration of Alkenes „ Hydroboration/oxidation: syn, non-Markovnikov

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 a carbonyl compound in general gives

an alcohol

„ Note that organic reduction reactions add the

equivalent of H2 to a molecule

Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones „ Aldehydes gives primary alcohols „ Ketones gives secondary alcohols

Catalytic Hydrogenation: O RCH aldehyde

+

H2

Pt, Pd or Ni

RCH2OH primary alcohol

O Pt, Pd or Ni RCR' + H2 ketone

OH RCHR' secondary alcohol

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

reduce other common functional groups

„ Lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4) is more powerful,

less specific, and very reactive with water

„ Both add the equivalent of “H-”

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

1. NaBH4, ethanol

?

2. H3O

O2N

m-Nitrobenzaldehyde

O CH3(CH2)5CH Heptanal

1. LiAlH4, ether 2. H3O

O CH3CCH2C(CH3)3

?

1. NaBH4, ethanol

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

O (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 „ LiAlH4 is used because NaBH4 is not effective

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1. LiAlH4, ether

COOH

?

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.

O COCH2CH3 1. LiAlH4, ether 2. H3O

?

ethyl benzoate

Note: The reduction of esters yields two alcohols

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

O

?

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

O

O

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

OH

O

CH3CCH2CH2COCH3

?

OH CH3CCH2CH2CH2OH

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

OH CHCH3

OH H

(CH3)2CHCH2OH

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.

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