Title: Aldehydes
1Aldehydes Ketones
Chapter 16
2The Carbonyl Group
- In this and several following chapters, we study
the physical and chemical properties of classes
of compounds containing the carbonyl group, CO. - aldehydes and ketones (Chapter 16)
- carboxylic acids (Chapter 17)
- acid halides, acid anhydrides, esters, amides
(Chapter 18) - enolate anions (Chapter 19)
316.1 The Carbonyl Group
- the carbonyl group consists of one sigma bond
formed by the overlap of sp2 hybrid orbitals and
one pi bond formed by the overlap of parallel 2p
orbitals. - pi bonding and pi antibonding MOs for
formaldehyde.
4Structure
- the functional group of an aldehyde is a carbonyl
group bonded to a H atom and a carbon atom. - the functional group of a ketone is a carbonyl
group bonded to two carbon atoms.
O
O
O
516.2 A. Nomenclature
- IUPAC names
- the parent chain is the longest chain that
contains the functional group. - for an aldehyde, change the suffix from -e to
al. - for an unsaturated aldehyde, change the infix
from -an- to -en- the location of the suffix
determines the numbering pattern. - for a cyclic molecule in which -CHO is bonded to
the ring, add the suffix carbaldehyde.
6B. Nomenclature Aldehydes
- the IUPAC retains the common names benzaldehyde
and cinnamaldehyde, as well formaldehyde and
acetaldehyde.
7Nomenclature Ketones
- IUPAC names
- the parent alkane is the longest chain that
contains the carbonyl group. - indicate the ketone by changing the suffix -e to
-one. - number the chain to give CO the smaller number.
- the IUPAC retains the common names acetone,
acetophenone, and benzophenone.
8Order of Precedence, Table 16.1
- For compounds that contain more than one
functional group indicated by a suffix.
9C. Common Names
- for an aldehyde, the common name is derived from
the common name of the corresponding carboxylic
acid. - for a ketone, name the two alkyl or aryl groups
bonded to the carbonyl carbon and add the word
ketone.
1016.3 Physical Properties
- Oxygen is more electronegative than carbon (3.5
vs 2.5) and, therefore, a CO group is polar. - aldehydes and ketones are polar compounds and
interact in the pure state by dipole-dipole
interaction. - they have higher boiling points and are more
soluble in water than nonpolar compounds of
comparable molecular weight.
11Preparation of aldehydes and ketones
- Review of methods previously seen in 3010.
- Oxidation of alkenes with conc. KMnO4
- Oxidation of alkenes with O3
- Oxidation of 1o alcohols with PCC
- Oxidation of 2o alcohols with Na2Cr2O4 H2SO4
- Oxidation of glycols with HIO4
- Hydroysis of alkynes
- Hydroboration/oxidation of alkynes
1216.4 Reaction Themes , Nu attack at C
- One of the most common reaction themes of a
carbonyl group is addition of a nucleophile to
form a tetrahedral carbonyl addition compound.
13Reaction Themes , O attack at H
- A second common theme is reaction with a proton
or other Lewis acid to form a resonance-stabilized
cation. - protonation increases the electron deficiency of
the carbonyl carbon and makes it more reactive
toward nucleophiles.
14Reaction Themes, stereochemistry
- often the tetrahedral product of addition to a
carbonyl is a new chiral center. - if none of the starting materials is chiral and
the reaction takes place in an achiral
environment, then enantiomers will be formed as a
racemic mixture.
1516.5 Addition of C Nucleophiles
- Addition of carbon nucleophiles is one of the
most important types of nucleophilic additions to
a CO group. - a new carbon-carbon bond is formed in the
process. - we study addition of these carbon nucleophiles.
16A. Grignard Reagents
- Given the difference in electronegativity between
carbon and magnesium (2.5 - 1.3), the C-Mg bond
is polar covalent, with C?- and Mg?. - in its reactions, a Grignard reagent behaves as a
carbanion. - Carbanion an anion in which carbon has an
unshared pair of electrons and bears a negative
charge. - a carbanion is a good nucleophile and adds to the
carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones.
17Grignard Reagents, 1o alcohols
- addition of a Grignard reagent to formaldehyde
followed by H3O gives a 1 alcohol. - Note that these reactions require two steps.
18Grignard Reagents, 2o alcohols
- addition to any other aldehyde, RCHO, gives a
2 alcohol (two steps).
19Grignard Reagents, 3o alcohols
- addition to a ketone gives a 3 alcohol (two
steps).
20Grignard Reagents
- Problem 2-phenyl-2-butanol can be synthesized
by three different combinations of a Grignard
reagent and a ketone. Show each combination. - Work backwards to get starting materials.
21Grignard Reagents
- Problem 2-phenyl-2-butanol can be synthesized
by three different combinations of a Grignard
reagent and a ketone. Show each combination. - Look at
- Acetophenone Propiophenone 2-butanone
- EtMgBr MeMgBr PhMgBr
22B. Organolithium Compounds
- Organolithium compounds, RLi, give the same CO
addition reactions as RMgX but generally are more
reactive and usually give higher yields. - Lithium is monovalent and does not insert between
C and X like Mg. - Like the Grignard this requires two steps.
23C. Salts of Terminal Alkynes
- Addition of an alkyne anion followed by H3O
gives an ?-acetylenic alcohol.
24Salts of Terminal Alkynes
- Addition of water or hydroboration/oxidation
- of the product gives an enol which rearranges.
25D. Addition of HCN
- HCN adds to the CO group of an aldehyde or
ketone to give a cyanohydrin. - Cyanohydrin a molecule containing an -OH group
and a -CN group bonded to the same carbon.
O
N
N
H
26Addition of HCN
- Mechanism of cyanohydrin formation
- Step 1 nucleophilic addition of cyanide to the
carbonyl carbon. - Step 2 proton transfer from HCN gives the
cyanohydrin and regenerates cyanide ion.
27Cyanohydrins
- The value of cyanohydrins
- 1. acid-catalyzed dehydration of the alcohol
gives an alkene. - 2. catalytic reduction of the cyano group gives a
1 amine.
28Cyanohydrins
- The value of cyanohydrins
- 3. acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of the nitrile gives
a carboxylic acid.
N
2916.6 Wittig Reaction
- The Wittig reaction is a very versatile synthetic
method for the synthesis of alkenes from
aldehydes and ketones.
30Phosphonium Ylides (Wittig reagent)
- Phosphonium ylides are formed in two steps
- Step 1 nucleophilic displacement of iodine by
triphenylphosphine. - Step 2 treatment of the phosphonium salt with a
very strong base, most commonly BuLi, NaH, or
NaNH2.
31Wittig Reaction
- Phosphonium ylides react with the CO group of an
aldehyde or ketone to give an alkene. - Step 1 nucleophilic addition of the ylide to the
electrophilic carbonyl carbon. - Step 2 decomposition of the oxaphosphatane.
32Wittig Reaction
33Wittig Reaction
- some Wittig reactions are Z selective, others are
E selective. - Wittig reagents with an anion-stabilizing group,
such as a carbonyl group, adjacent to the
negative charge are generally E selective. - Wittig reagents without an anion-stabilizing
group are generally Z selective.
34Wittig Reaction Modification - Omit
- Horner-Emmons-Wadsworth modification
- uses a phosphonoester.
- phosphonoester formation requires two steps (see
next slide).
35Wittig Reaction Modification - Omit
- phosphonoesters are prepared by successive SN2
reactions - attack by the phosphite, then
- attack by Br-
36Wittig Reaction Modification - Omit
- treatment of a phosphonoester with a strong base
produces the modified Wittig reagent, - an aldehyde or ketone is then added to give an
alkene. - a particular value of using a phosphonoester-stabi
lized anion is that they are almost exclusively E
selective.
3716.7 A. Addition of H2O, hydrates
- Addition of water (hydration) to the carbonyl
group of an aldehyde or ketone gives a geminal
diol, commonly referred to a gem-diol. - gem-diols are also referred to as hydrates.
38Addition of H2O, hydrates
- when formaldehyde is dissolved in water at 20C,
the carbonyl group is more than 99 hydrated. - the equilibrium concentration of a hydrated
ketone is considerably smaller.
39B. Addition of Alcohol, hemiacetals
- Addition of one molecule of alcohol to the CO
group of an aldehyde or ketone gives a
hemiacetal. - Hemiacetal a molecule containing an -OH and an
-OR or -OAr bonded to the same carbon.
40Addition of Alcohols, in base
- Formation of a hemiacetal can be base catalyzed.
- Step 1 proton transfer gives an alkoxide.
- Step 2 attack of RO- on the carbonyl carbon.
- Step 3 proton transfer from the alcohol to O-
gives the hemiacetal and generates a new base
catalyst.
41Addition of Alcohols, in acid
- Formation of a hemiacetal can be acid catalyzed.
- Step 1 proton transfer to the carbonyl oxygen.
- Step 2 attack of ROH on the carbonyl carbon..
- Step 3 proton transfer from the oxonium ion to
A- gives the hemiacetal and generates a new acid
catalyst.
42Addition of Alcohol, cyclic hemiacetals
- hemiacetals are only minor components of an
equilibrium mixture, except where a five- or
six-membered ring can form. -
43Addition of Alcohol, cyclic hemiacetals
- at equilibrium, the b anomer of glucose
predominates because the -OH group on the
anomeric carbon is equatorial.
44Addition of Alcohols, acetals
- Hemiacetals can react with alcohols to form
acetals. - Acetal a molecule containing two -OR or -OAr
groups bonded to the same carbon.
45Addition of Alcohols, acetals
- Step 1 proton transfer from HA gives an oxonium
ion. - Step 2 loss of water gives a resonance-stabilized
cation.
46Addition of Alcohols, acetals
- Step 3 reaction of the cation (an electrophile)
with methanol (a nucleophile) gives the conjugate
acid of the acetal. - Step 4 proton transfer to A- gives the acetal
and generates a new acid catalyst.
47Addition of Alcohols, cyclic acetals
- with ethylene glycol and other glycols, the
product is a five-membered cyclic acetal. - these are used as carbonyl protective groups.
48Dean-Stark Trap, Fig. 16.1
49C. Acetals as Protecting Grps
- Suppose you wish to bring about a Grignard
reaction between these compounds. - But a Grignard reagent prepared from
4-bromobutanal will self-destruct! (react with
CO)
50Acetals as Protecting Groups
- So, first protect the -CHO group as an acetal,
- then do the Grignard reaction.
- Hydrolysis in H, HOH (not shown) removes the
acetal to give the target molecule.
51D. Acetals as Protecting Groups
- Tetrahydropyranyl (THP), as a protecting group
for an alcohol. - the THP group is an acetal and, therefore, stable
to neutral and basic solutions, and to most
oxidizing and reducting agents. - it is removed by acid-catalyzed hydrolysis.
THP group
O
O
Dihydropyran
5216.8 A. Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- Ammonia, 1 aliphatic amines, and 1 aromatic
amines react with the CO group of aldehydes and
ketones to give imines (Schiff bases). An imine
has a CHN bond.
53Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- Formation of an imine occurs in two steps.
- Step 1 carbonyl addition followed by proton
transfer. - Step 2 loss of H2O and proton transfer to
solvent.
54Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- a value of imines is that the carbon-nitrogen
double bond can be reduced to a carbon-nitrogen
single bond. - imine formation
- reduction
N
O
(An imine)
Cyclohexanone
H
N
N
Dicyclohexylamine
(An imine)
55Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- Rhodopsin (visual purple) is the imine formed
between 11-cis-retinal (vitamin A aldehyde) and
the protein opsin.
56Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- Secondary amines react with the CO group of
aldehydes and ketones to form enamines. - the mechanism of enamine formation involves
formation of a tetrahedral carbonyl addition
compound followed by its acid-catalyzed
dehydration. - we discuss the chemistry of enamines in more
detail in Chapter 19.
57B. Addition of Nitrogen Nucleophiles
- the carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones
reacts with hydrazine and its derivatives in a
manner similar to its reactions with 1 amines.
Table 16.4
5816.9 A. Acidity of ?-Hydrogens
- Hydrogens alpha to a carbonyl group are more
acidic than hydrogens of alkanes, alkenes, and
alkynes but less acidic than the hydroxyl
hydrogen of alcohols.
59Acidity of ?-Hydrogens
- ?-Hydrogens are more acidic because the enolate
anion is stabilized by - 1. delocalization of its negative charge..
- 2. the electron-withdrawing inductive effect of
the adjacent electronegative oxygen.
60Keto-Enol Tautomerism
- protonation of the enolate anion on oxygen gives
the enol form protonation on carbon gives the
keto form.
61Keto-Enol Tautomerism
- acid-catalyzed equilibration of keto and enol
tautomers occurs in two steps. - Step 1 proton transfer to the carbonyl oxygen.
- Step 2 proton transfer to the base A-.
62B. Keto-Enol Tautomerism, Table 16.5
- Keto-enol equilibria for simple aldehydes and
ketones lie far toward the keto form.
63Keto-Enol Tautomerism
- For certain types of molecules, however, the enol
is the major form present at equilibrium. - for ?-diketones, the enol is stabilized by
conjugation of the pi system of the carbon-carbon
double bond and the carbonyl group. - for acyclic ?-diketones, the enol is further
stabilized by hydrogen bonding.
6416.10 A. Oxidation of Aldehydes
- Aldehydes are oxidized to carboxylic acids by a
variety of oxidizing agents, including H2CrO4. - They are also oxidized by Ag(I).
- in one method, a solution of the aldehyde in
aqueous ethanol or THF is shaken with a slurry of
silver oxide.
65Oxidation of Aldehydes
- Aldehydes are oxidized by O2 in a radical chain
reaction. - liquid aldehydes are so sensitive to air that
they must be stored under N2.
O
O
2
CH
COH
2
Benzoic acid
Benzaldehyde
66B. Oxidation of Ketones
- ketones are not normally oxidized by chromic acid
- they are oxidized by powerful oxidants at high
temperature and high concentrations of acid or
base.
O
O
O
6716.11 Reduction
- aldehydes can be reduced to 1 alcohols.
- ketones can be reduced to 2 alcohols.
- the CO group of an aldehyde or ketone can also
be reduced to a -CH2- group.
Aldehydes
Ketones
O
O
68A. Metal Hydride Reduction
- The most common laboratory reagents for the
reduction of aldehydes and ketones are NaBH4 and
LiAlH4. - both reagents are sources of hydride ion, H-, a
very powerful nucleophile.
H
H
H
H
69NaBH4 Reduction
- reductions with NaBH4 are most commonly carried
out in aqueous methanol, in pure methanol, or in
ethanol. - one mole of NaBH4 reduces four moles of aldehyde
or ketone.
70NaBH4 Reduction
- The key step in metal hydride reduction is
transfer of a hydride ion to the CO group to
form a tetrahedral carbonyl addition compound.
71LiAlH4 Reduction
- unlike NaBH4, LiAlH4 reacts violently with water,
methanol, and other protic solvents. - reductions using it are carried out in diethyl
ether or tetrahydrofuran (THF).
72B. Catalytic Reduction
- Catalytic reductions are generally carried out at
from 25 to 100C and 1 to 5 atm H2.
O
Pt
O
H
1-Butanol
73Catalytic Reduction
- A carbon-carbon double bond may also be reduced
under these conditions. - by careful choice of experimental conditions, it
is often possible to selectively reduce a
carbon-carbon double in the presence of an
aldehyde or ketone.
O
H
1-Butanol
74C. Clemmensen Reduction, in acid
- refluxing an aldehyde or ketone with amalgamated
zinc in concentrated HCl converts the carbonyl
group to a methylene group.
75Wolff-Kishner Reduction, in base
- in the original procedure, the aldehyde or ketone
and hydrazine are refluxed with KOH in a
high-boiling solvent. - the same reaction can be brought about using
hydrazine and potassium tert-butoxide in DMSO.
7616.12 A. Racemization
- Racemization at an ?-carbon may be catalyzed by
either acid or base.
77B. Deuterium Exchange
- Deuterium exchange at an ?-carbon may be
catalyzed by either acid or base.
78C. ?-Halogenation
- ?-Halogenation aldehydes and ketones with at
least one ?-hydrogen react at an ?-carbon with
Br2 and Cl2. - reaction is catalyzed by both acid and base.
79?-Halogenation, in acid
- Acid-catalyzed ?-halogenation.
- Step 1 acid-catalyzed enolization.
- Step 2 nucleophilic attack of the enol on
halogen. - Step 3 (not shown) proton transfer to solvent
completes the reaction.
80?-Halogenation, in base
- Base-promoted ?-halogenation.
- Step 1 formation of an enolate anion.
- Step 2 nucleophilic attack of the enolate anion
on halogen.
81?-Halogenation, in acid
- Acid-catalyzed halogenation
- introduction of a second halogen is slower than
the first. - introduction of the electronegative halogen on
the ?-carbon decreases the basicity of the
carbonyl oxygen toward protonation.
82?-Halogenation, in base
- Base-promoted ?-halogenation
- each successive halogenation is more rapid than
the previous one. - the introduction of the electronegative halogen
on the ?-carbon increases the acidity of the
remaining ?-hydrogens and, thus, each successive
?-hydrogen is removed more rapidly than the
previous one.
83Review of Spectroscopy
- IR Spectroscopy
- Very strong CO stretch around 1710 cm-1.
- Conjugation lowers frequency.
- Ring strain raises frequency.
- Additional C-H stretch for aldehyde two
absorptions 2720 cm-1 and 2820 cm-1.
84H1 NMR of butanal
85C13 NMR of 2-heptanone
86MS of butanal
87McLafferty Rearrangement of butanal
- Loss of alkene (even mass number)
- Must have ?-hydrogen
88Aldehydes Ketones
End Chapter 16