Title: Chapter 10 Structure and Synthesis of Alcohols
1Chapter 10Structure and Synthesis of Alcohols
Organic Chemistry, 5th EditionL. G. Wade, Jr.
Jo Blackburn Richland College, Dallas, TX Dallas
County Community College District ã 2003,
Prentice Hall
2Structure of Alcohols
- Hydroxyl (OH) functional group
- Oxygen is sp3 hybridized.
3Classification
- Primary carbon with OH is bonded to one other
carbon. - Secondary carbon with OH is bonded to two other
carbons. - Tertiary carbon with OH is bonded to three
other carbons. - Aromatic (phenol) -OH is bonded to a benzene
ring.
4IUPAC Nomenclature
- Find the longest carbon chain containing the
carbon with the -OH group. - Drop the -e from the alkane name, add -ol.
- Number the chain, starting from the end closest
to the -OH group. - Number and name all substituents.
5Name these
2-methylpropanol
Butan-2-ol
2-methylpropan-2-ol
3-bromo-3-methylcyclohexanol
6Unsaturated Alcohols
- Hydroxyl group takes precedence. Assign that
carbon the lowest number. - Use alkene or alkyne name.
pent-4-ene-2-ol
7Naming Priority
- Acids
- Esters
- Aldehydes
- Ketones
- Alcohols
- Amines
- Alkenes
- Alkynes
- Alkanes
- Ethers
- Halides
8Hydroxy Substituent
- When -OH is part of a higher priority class of
compound, it is named as hydroxy. - Example
4-hydroxybutanoic acid
9Common Names
- Alcohol can be named as alkyl alcohol.
- Useful only for small alkyl groups.
- Examples
isobutyl alcohol
sec-butyl alcohol
10Naming Diols
- Two numbers are needed to locate the two -OH
groups. - Use -diol as suffix instead of -ol.
hexan-1,6-diol
11Glycols
- 1, 2 diols (vicinal diols) are called glycols.
- Common names for glycols use the name of the
alkene from which they were made.
Ethane-1,2-diol
Propane-1-,2diol
propylene glycol
ethylene glycol
12Naming Phenols
- -OH group is assumed to be on carbon 1.
- For common names of disubstituted phenols, use
ortho- for 1,2 meta- for 1,3 and para- for 1,4. - Methyl phenols are cresols.
4-methylphenol
para-cresol
3-chlorophenol
meta-chlorophenol
13Physical Properties
- Unusually high boiling points due to hydrogen
bonding between molecules. - Small alcohols are miscible in water, but
solubility decreases as the size of the alkyl
group increases.
14Boiling Points
15Solubility in Water
16Acidity of Alcohols
- pKa range 15.5-18.0 (water 15.7)
- Acidity decreases as alkyl group increases.
- Halogens increase the acidity.
- Phenol is 100 million times more acidic than
cyclohexanol!
17Table of Ka Values
18Methanol
- Wood alcohol
- Industrial production from synthesis gas
- Common industrial solvent
- Fuel at Indianapolis 500
- Fire can be extinguished with water
- High octane rating
- Low emissions
- But, lower energy content
- Invisible flame
19Ethanol
- Fermentation of sugar and starches in grains
- 12-15 alcohol, then yeast cells die.
- Distillation produces hard liquors
- Azeotrope 95 ethanol, constant boiling
- Denatured alcohol used as solvent
- Gasahol 10 ethanol in gasoline
- Toxic dose 200 mL ethanol, 100 mL methanol
202-Propanol
- Rubbing alcohol
- Catalytic hydration of propene
21Formation of Alkoxide Ions
- React methanol and ethanol with sodium metal
(redox reaction).
React less acidic alcohols with more reactive
potassium.
22Formation of Phenoxide Ion
- Phenol reacts with hydroxide ions to form
phenoxide ions - no redox is necessary.
O
O
H
O
H
H
O
H
p
K
1
5
.
7
a
p
K
1
0
a
23Synthesis (Review)
- Nucleophilic substitution of OH- on alkyl halide
- Hydration of alkenes
- water in acid solution (not very effective)
- oxymercuration - demercuration
- hydroboration - oxidation
24Glycols (Review)
- Syn hydroxylation of alkenes
- osmium tetroxide, hydrogen peroxide
- cold, dilute, basic potassium permanganate
- Anti hydroxylation of alkenes
- peroxyacids, hydrolysis
25Organometallic Reagents
- Carbon is bonded to a metal (Mg or Li).
- Carbon is nucleophilic (partially negative).
- It will attack a partially positive carbon.
- C - X
- C O
- A new carbon-carbon bond forms.
26Grignard Reagents
- Formula R-Mg-X (reacts like R- MgX)
- Stabilized by anhydrous ether
- Iodides most reactive
- May be formed from any halide
- primary
- secondary
- tertiary
- vinyl
- aryl
27Some Grignard Reagents
28Organolithium Reagents
- Formula R-Li (reacts like R- Li)
- Can be produced from alkyl, vinyl, or aryl
halides, just like Grignard reagents. - Ether not necessary, wide variety of solvents can
be used.
29Reaction with Carbonyl
- R- attacks the partially positive carbon in the
carbonyl. - The intermediate is an alkoxide ion.
- Addition of water or dilute acid protonates the
alkoxide to produce an alcohol.
30Synthesis of 1 Alcohols
- Grignard formaldehyde yields a primary alcohol
with one additional carbon.
31Synthesis of 2º Alcohols
- Grignard aldehyde yields a secondary alcohol.
32Synthesis of 3º Alcohols
- Grignard ketone yields a tertiary alcohol.
33How would you synthesize
34Grignard Reactions with Acid Chlorides and
Esters
- Use two moles of Grignard reagent.
- The product is a tertiary alcohol with two
identical alkyl groups. - Reaction with one mole of Grignard reagent
produces a ketone intermediate, which reacts with
the second mole of Grignard reagent.
35Grignard Acid Chloride (1)
- Grignard attacks the carbonyl.
- Chloride ion leaves.
Ketone intermediate
36Grignard and Ester (1)
- Grignard attacks the carbonyl.
- Alkoxide ion leaves! ? !
Ketone intermediate
37Second step of reaction
- Second mole of Grignard reacts with the ketone
intermediate to form an alkoxide ion. - Alkoxide ion is protonated with dilute acid.
38How would you synthesize...
- Using an acid chloride or ester.
39Grignard Reagent Ethylene Oxide
- Epoxides are unusually reactive ethers.
- Product is a 1º alcohol with 2 additional carbons.
40Limitations of Grignard
- No water or other acidic protons like O-H, N-H,
S-H, or -CC-H. Grignard reagent is destroyed,
becomes an alkane. - No other electrophilic multiple bonds, like CN,
CN, SO, or NO.
41Reduction of Carbonyl
- Reduction of aldehyde yields 1º alcohol.
- Reduction of ketone yields 2º alcohol.
- Reagents
- Sodium borohydride, NaBH4
- Lithium aluminum hydride, LiAlH4
- Raney nickel
42Sodium Borohydride
- Hydride ion, H-, attacks the carbonyl carbon,
forming an alkoxide ion. - Then the alkoxide ion is protonated by dilute
acid. - Only reacts with carbonyl of aldehyde or ketone,
not with carbonyls of esters or carboxylic acids.
43Lithium Aluminum Hydride
- Stronger reducing agent than sodium borohydride,
but dangerous to work with. - Converts esters and acids to 1º alcohols.
44Comparison of Reducing Agents
- LiAlH4 is stronger.
- LiAlH4 reduces more stable compounds which are
resistant to reduction.
45Catalytic Hydrogenation
- Add H2 with Raney nickel catalyst.
- Also reduces any CC bonds.
46Thiols (Mercaptans)
- Sulfur analogues of alcohols, -SH.
- Named by adding -thiol to alkane name.
- The -SH group is called mercapto.
- Complex with heavy metals Hg, As, Au.
- More acidic than alcohols, react with NaOH to
form thiolate ion. - Stinks!
47Thiol Synthesis
- Use a large excess of sodium hydrosulfide with
unhindered alkyl halide to prevent dialkylation
to R-S-R.
48Thiol Oxidation
- Easily oxidized to disulfides, an important
feature of protein structure.
- Vigorous oxidation with KMnO4, HNO3, or NaOCl,
produces sulfonic acids.
49End of Chapter 10