Title: Carbonyl Chemistry
1Carbonyl Chemistry
C1
- Part I
- Nomenclature
- General Properties
- Carbonyls as Bases
- Enolization
- Preparation of Aldehydes
- Preparation of Ketones
- Reactivity of Carbonyls
- Nucleophilic Addition Reactions
- Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions
2Carbonyl Chemistry
C2
- Chemistry of aldehydes ketones
- The carbonyl group
- planar
- polarized
- carbon is sp2 hybridized
3Carbonyl Nomenclature Aldehydes
C3
- formaldehyde acetaldehyde
- as a substituent (e.g. on a ring) aromatic
Aldehydes suffix -al
methanal
ethanal
benzaldehyde
cyclohexanecarbaldehyde
4Carbonyl Nomenclature Ketones
C4
- propanone methyl ethyl ketone
- a phenone
acetone
2-butanone
Ketones suffix -one
cyclopentanone
acetophenone
5Carbonyl Nomenclature
C5
- Indicating positions relative to a
carbonyl - should a carbonyl need to be named as a
substituentuse oxo - e.g.
6Carbonyls as Bases
C6
- Protonation of the carbonyl oxygen
- positive charge enhances electrophilicity of the
carbonyl group ? increase in reactivity
7Carbonyls as Bases
C7
- Lewis acids are often used (e.g. AlCl3)
Specific example
8Carbonyls as Acids
C8
- ?-hydrogen (to the carbonyl) can be removed with
a base. - carbanion stabilized by delocalizat
ion - enolate anions
keto / enol are tautomers
9Enolization
C9
- for acetone.......
- for penta-2,4-dione......(stabilized by
diketo-delocalization)
almost exclusively in keto form
significant proportion in enol form
10Enolization
C10
- .....already seen base catalyzed enolization
(previous slides) - acid catalyzed enolization also possible.
11Preparation of Aldehydes
C11
- Mild Oxidation of Primary Alcohols
- e.g. pyridinium chlorochromate in
dichloromethane - Ozonolysis of AlkenesNote at least one
vinylic hydrogen is needed
12Preparation of Aldehydes
C12
- Partial Reduction of Carboxylic AcidsDIBAH
diisobutylaluminiumhydride
13Preparation of Ketones
C13
- Oxidation of Secondary Alcohols
- can use - Jones reagent (CrO3 in aq. H2SO4)
- - sodium dichromate
- - PCC
- Ozonolysis of Disubstituted Alkenes
70
14Preparation of Ketones
C14
- Friedel-Crafts Reaction for Aryl Ketones
- Hydration of Terminal Alkynes
- - requires catalytic mercuric ion
- - methyl ketones are produced
15Reactivity of the Carbonyl
C15
- The ? carbonyl carbon is susceptible to
nucleophilic attack - two product types are possible
- substituted products or addition products
?-
O
O
OH
C
?
C
C
R
X
Nu
R
X
R
Nu
Nu
16Addition vs Substitution
C16
- Substitution
- When Y is a good leaving group, substitution is
favoured
O
O
O
Nu
Y
C
R
Y
C
C
R
Nu
R
Y
Nu
17Carbonyl Substitution Reactions
C17
- Factors influencing Nucleophilic attack........
- Steric hinderence the more highly substituted
the carbonyl, the less susceptible to Nu
attack - Electronegativity the more electronegative
Y....the greater the ? on the carbonyl
carbon ? the more reactive to Nu attack
18Carbonyl Substitution Reactions
C18
O
O
O
O
(CH3)3CCCl
(CH3)2CHCCl
CH3CH2CCl
CH3CCl
increasing reactivity
O
O
O
C
C
C
CH3
NH2
OH
CH3
Cl
CH3
acetamide
acetic acid
acetyl chloride
19Carbonyl Addition Reactions
C19
- Addition Reactions
- If Y cannot stabilize a -ve charge, it is a
poor leaving group? Nu attacks yields addition
products - e.g. if Y H leaving group would be a hydride
ion - if Y CH3 leaving group would be a 1o methyl
ion - both examples are not stablized ? are poor
leaving groups - ? Nu addition reaction occurs
OH
O
O
H
Nu
C
R
Y
C
R
Y
C
R
Y
Nu
Nu
20Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
- Nucleophilic addition of HCN
- - formation of Cyanohydrins
- - use of carbon nucleophiles
- Note synthetic utility in addition of 1 x
extra carbon - addition of 2 x functional groups
-
21Nucleophilic attack by Cyanide Ions
C21
nitrile hydrolysis
cyano-reduction yielding an amine
lactic acid
22Functional Group Interconversions
C22
- consider the previous example
23C23
- Further examples of the nucleophilic addition of
cyanide ions
an aldehyde
a ketone
24Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C24
- Nucleophilic addition of Organometallic
Nucleophiles
Organometallic nucleophiles are carbon
nucleophiles
Organometallic nucleophiles
Grignard reagents
organolithium reagents
e.g. R-MgBr
e.g. R-Li
25Organolithium Reagents as Carbon Nucleophiles
C25
carbon nucleophile can attack electrophilic
centre
specific example
26Organolithium Reagents as Carbon Nucleophiles
C26
100
27Grignard Reagents as Carbon Nucleophiles
C27
- General Reaction......
- carbonyls that can be reacted
28Reactions of Grignards with......
C28
- with carbon dioxide....
- with formaldehyde....
carboxylic acid
Note addition of one (1) extra carbon
primary alcohol
29Reactions of Grignards with......
C29
- with aldehydes....
- with ketones....
secondary alcohol
tertiary alcohol
30Reactions of Grignards with......
C30
tertiary alcohol
31Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C31
- Hydrides as Nucleophiles
- hydride source reducing agents
- e.g. LiAlH4 - lithium aluminiun hydride
- NaBH4 - sodium borohydride
hydride H- is basic a very strong
nucleophile
32Hydrides as Nucleophiles Examples
C32
-
- all four hydrides (H-) from the borohydride
are used - LiAlH4 NaBH4 do NOT reduce isolated double
bonds
95
33Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C33
- Nucleophilic Addition by Oxygen Containing
Species - Hydrates, Acetals Ketals
Reactions of aldehydes with alcohols
Reactions of ketones with alcohols
Reaction with water
34Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C34
- Reactions with Water Formation of Hydrates
- general example
35Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C35
- Hydrate formation (reactions with water) Specific
Examples
acetone hydrate
formaldehyde
formaldehyde hydrate
36Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C36
- Reactions of Alcohols with Aldehydes Acetal
Formation - General Example
aldehyde
hemiacetal
acetal
37Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C37
- Reactions of Alcohols with Aldehydes Acetal
Formation - Specific Example
aldehyde
38Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C38
- Reactions of Alcohols with Ketones Acetal
Formation - General Example
ketone
39Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C39
- Reactions of Alcohols with Ketones Acetal
Formation - Specific Example
- hemiacetals hemiketals are unstable (and
reversible) - unless both functional groups are part of the
same molecule
0.3
40Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C40
- Reactions of Alcohols with Aldehydes Acetal
Formation
glucose as hydroxyaldehyde
glucose as stable hemiacetal
41Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C41
- for acetals ketals.....
- reverse reaction is simply hydrolysis in the
presence of acid - Mechanism of acetal/ketal formation
hydrolysis.........
42Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C42
- Nucleophilic Addition of Thiols
- R-OH
- c.f. R-SH
-
- products are generally more stable
- General Example
- (Raney nickel will reduce any R-s group to R-H)
43Nucleophilic Addition Reactions of Carbonyls
C43
- Nucleophilic Addition of Thiols
- Specific Example
- Note no strong acids or bases required
(important with sensitive molecules)
44Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions of Carbonyls
C44
- Nucleophilic Substitution by Nitrogen Containing
Species
45Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions of Carbonyls
C45
- Preparation of Derivatives
- oximes
- hydrazones
46Preparation of Derivatives
C46
- semicarbazones
- 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNP)
benzaldehyde semicarbazone (mp 222o)