Title: Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols and Chirality
1Chemistry B11
Chapter 14 15 Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols and
Chirality
2Alcohols
Alcohols Contain a hydroxyl group
(-OH). Phenols Contain a benzene ring with a
hydroxyl group (-OH).
3Naming Alcohols
- IUPAC name We replace the -e in alkane name with
-ol. - Common name As simple alcohols using the name of
the alkyl group followed by alcohol. - CH4 methane
- CH3-OH methanol (methyl alcohol)
-
- CH3-CH3 ethane
- CH3-CH2-OH ethanol (ethyl alcohol)
4Naming Alcohols
Step 1 Select the longest carbon chain that
contains the -OH group.
Step 2 Number from the end nearest -OH group.
Step 3 Change the ending of parent alkane from -e
to -ol. Use the number to show the location of
-OH.
Step 4 Give the location and name of each
substituent (alphabetical order) as a prefix to
the name of the main chain.
5Naming Alcohols
CH3-CH2-CH2-OH 1-propanol OH
CH3-CH-CH3 2-propanol CH3
OH
CH3-CH-CH2-CH2-CH-CH3 5-methyl-2-hexanol
1
2
3
3
1
2
5
1
2
3
4
6
6Naming Alcohols
OH CH3-CH-CH2-CH3
2-butanol CH3
CH3-CH-CH -CH2-OH 3-chloro-2-m
ethyl-1-butanol CH3
CH3-C-CH2-OH 2,2-dimethyl-1-propano
l
1
2
3
4
Cl
1
2
3
4
CH3
1
2
3
7Diols Triols
Diol a compound containing two OH (Hydroxyl
groups). Triol a compound containing three OH
(Hydroxyl groups).
CH2 CH2
CH2 CH CH2
CH3 CH CH2
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
1,2-Ethanediol (Ethylene glycol)
1,2-Propanediol (Propylene glycol)
1,2,3-Propanetriol (glycerol, glycerin)
8Different types of Alcohols
Primary (1º) Secondary (2º ) Tertiary
(3º) H CH3 CH3
CH3-C-OH CH3-C-OH CH3-C-OH
H
H
CH3 1 C 2 C 3 C
attached attached attached to
C-OH to C-OH to C-OH
9Phenol
- Phenol is the IUPAC name for benzene with a
hydroxyl group. - Many are used as antiseptics and disinfectants.
- Is a weak acid.
OH
Phenol
10Physical Properties of Alcohols
- Alcohols are polar molecules (because of O-H and
C-O). - Hydrogen bonding between alcohols molecules.
- Have higher boiling point than Alkanes, Alkenes
Alkynes. - Molecular weight ? London dispersion forces ?
bp ? - More soluble in water (Molecular weight ?
solubility ?). - They are weak acids (weaker than Phenol).
polar
nonpolar
11Chemical Properties of Alcohols
1. Acidity of Alcohols
2. Acid-Catalyzed Dehydration
H2SO4
CH3CH2OH
CH2 CH2 H2O
180C
Dehydration
C C H20
- C C -
Hydration
H
OH
3. Oxidation of Alcohols
12Oxidation of 1 Alcohols
In the oxidation O of a primary alcohol 1?, one
H is removed from the OH group and another H
from the C bonded to the OH.
primary alcohol aldehyde
OH O
CH3-C-H CH3-C-H H2O
H ethanol
ethanal (ethyl alcohol)
(acetaldehyde)
O
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
13Oxidation of 2 Alcohols
The oxidation of 2? alcohols is similar to 1,
except that a ketone is formed.
secondary
alcohol ketone OH O
CH3-C-CH3
CH3-C-CH3 H2O
H 2-propanol
2-propanone
O
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
14Oxidation of 3 Alcohols
Tertiary 3? alcohols do not oxidize.
Tertiary alcohol no reaction
OH
CH3-C-CH3 no product
CH3 no H on the C-OH to
oxidize 2-methyl-2-propanol
O
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
15Oxidation of Alcohols in our body
- In the body
- Enzymes in the liver oxidize ethanol.
- Blood alcohol over 0.4 can be fatal.
- O O
-
- CH3CH2OH CH3CH CH3COH
2CO2 H2O Energy - ethanol ethanal
acetic acid
O
O
O
16Ethers
17Ethers
- An ether
- Contains an -O- between two carbon atoms.
- Is named from alkyl names of the attached groups
- (in alphabetical order) followed by ether.
- CH3-O-CH3 CH3-CH2-O-CH3
- dimethyl ether ethyl methyl ether
18Physical Properties of Ethers
- They are polar compounds (because of C-O).
- Weak dipole-dipole interaction.
- Low boiling point alkanes lt ethers lt alcohols.
- More soluble in water than other hydrocarbons
- of similar molecular weight (H-bond with water).
(3.5 2.5 1)
C-O
H
O
d
H
d-
19Chemical Properties of Ethers
Ethers are resistance to chemical reactions
(inert).
Oxidation
Reduction
Good solvent for organic reactions.
20Thiols
21Thiols
- An Thiol
- Contains an SH (sulfhydryl) group.
- Is named by selecting the longest carbon chain
that contain the -SH. We add -thiol to the name
of the parent alkane. - Parent chain is numbered from the end nearest to
- the -SH group.
- CH3-S-H CH3-CH2-S-H
- Methanethiol Ethanethiol
22CH3
CH3CHCH2CH2CH2SH
4-Methyl-1-pentanethiol
5
2
3
4
1
CH3
CH3CHCH2SH
2-Methyl-1-propanethiol
2
1
3
CH3
Cl
CH3-CH-CH2-CH2-CH-CH2-SH
5-Chloro-2-methyl-1-hexanethiol
1
2
3
4
5
6
23Physical Properties of Thiols
- They have unpleasant odors.
- They are nonpolar compounds.
- S-H (2.5 2.1 0.4) nonpolar covalent.
- 3. Low boiling point (London dispersion forces).
- 4. Almost insoluble in water.
24Chemical Properties of Thiols
1. Thiols are weak acids (react with strong
bases).
H2O
CH3CH2SH NaOH CH3CH2S-Na H2O
Sodium ethanethiolate
2. Oxidation to disulfides -S-S- disulfide
Oxidation
2CH3CH2SH O2 HOCH2CH2S-SCH2CH2OH
Reduction
25Chirality
26(No Transcript)
27A
28Achiral
superposable mirror images
2-propanol
This means that the original and its mirror image
are the similar molecule.
29Enantiomers (chiral)
nonsuperposable mirror images
2-butanol
They have different chemical and physical
properties.
30stereocenter
A carbon with four different groups bonded to it.
It usually creates enantiomers.