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ALDEHYDES

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ALDEHYDES & KETONES (ALKANALS & ALKANONES) ALDEHYDES & KETONES (ALKANALS & ALKANONES) The simplest aldehyde is formaldehyde (CH2O). It is the only aldehyde without an ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ALDEHYDES


1
  • ALDEHYDES KETONES
  • (ALKANALS ALKANONES)

2
ALDEHYDES KETONES (ALKANALS ALKANONES)
Aldehydes ketones both contain the carbonyl
group.
  • The simplest aldehyde is formaldehyde (CH2O). It
    is the only aldehyde without an alkyl group
    attached to the carbonyl C.

All other aldehydes, such as acetaldehyde
(CH3CHO), have one alkyl group and one H attached
to the carbonyl C.
  • All ketones have two alkyl groups attached to the
    carbonyl C.

3
Aldehydes and Ketones are Electrophiles
  • The carbonyl group has a strong dipole.
  • DEN(O-C) (3.5-2.5) 1.0 (a polar bond)
  • The d carbon is an electron acceptor, (an
    electrophile).
  • Good nucleophiles (CH3MgBr) and even fair
    nucleophiles (NH3) will readily add to the
    carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones.

The weak p bond breaks as the Nu- adds, so that
C remains tetravalent (? 5 bonds).
  • The alkyl group and the H atom bonded to the
    carbonyl are not leaving groups. They are not
    displaced because hydride (H-) and alkanides
    (R-) are extremely strong bases.
  • pKb H- -21 and pKb CH3- -40! (CH3-
    methide).

4
Aldehydes and Ketones are Electrophiles
  • Aldehydes and ketones are moderately reactive as
    electrophiles (electron acceptors) among the
    carboxylic acid derivatives.

5
Basicity of Aldehydes and Ketones
  • The d- oxygen is a weak base (pKb ca. 21)Its non
    bonded es are protonated by strong acids.
  • The charge is shared with the carbonyl C by
    resonance forming a carbocation a very good E.
  • Even weak Nu-s (like H2O and ROH) will donate
    electrons to an aldehyde or ketone in the
    presence of a strong acid catalyst, e.g., H2SO4
    or HCl.

6
Acidity of Aldehydes and Ketones
  • The a-carbon is the carbon bonded to the
    carbonyl, not the carbonyl carbon itself.
  • Hydrogens bonded to the carbonyl carbon, the
    a-carbon, the b-carbon, etc. are not polar and
    thus are not acidic hydrogens.
  • The a-hydrogens can be removed by strong bases
    because the carbanion that forms is stabilized by
    resonance with the adjacent carbonyl oxygen
    forming an enolate.

7
Boiling Points and Solubility of Aldehydes and
Ketones
  • The carbonyl group is strongly polar but does not
    produce hydrogen bonding (It has no polar
    hydrogens). As a result, the boiling points of
    aldehydes and ketones are higher than the
    nonpolar hydrocarbons and the alkyl halides but
    lower than those of alcohols.
  • Formaldehyde is a gas at room temperature (b.p.
    -21 ?C) but heavier aldehydes are liquids.
    Acetone, the simplest ketone, is a liquid at room
    temperature (b.p. 56 ?C).
  • Lower molecular weight aldehydes and ketones are
    water soluble. Acetone, formaldehyde and
    acetaldehyde are miscible in water.

8
IUPAC Nomenclature of Aldehydes
Aldehydes in open chains alkaneal ? alkanal

3-bromobutanal
4-hydroxypentanal
2-phenylethanal
  • The parent chain must contain the CHO- group, and
    this group is numbered as carbon 1 (because it is
    always at a chain end).

Aldehydes attached to rings ringcarbaldehyde
? ringcarbaldehyde
3-hydroxycyclopentanecarbaldehyde
benzenecarbaldehyde
9
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10
Common Names of Aldehydes
  • In the common system, aldehydes are named from
    the common names of the corresponding carboxylic
    acid.
  • The ic acid ending is replaced with aldehyde.

formic acid
formaldehyde
acetic acid
acetaldehyde
propionic acid
propionaldehyde
butyric acid
butyraldehyde
valeraldehyde
valeric acid
caproaldehyde
caproic acid
  • Substituents locations are given using Greek
    letters (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?.) beginning with the
    carbon next to the carbonyl carbon, the a-carbon.

?-bromobutyraldehyde
?-hydroxyvaleraldehyde
?-phenylacetaldehyde
11
IUPAC Nomenclature of Ketones
  • Ketones in both open chains and rings
  • alkaneone ? alkanone
  • The parent chain must contain the CO group , and
    this chain is numbered to give the carbonyl group
    as low a number as possible. In cyclic ketones,
    the carbonyl group is assigned the number 1.

1-phenyl-1-butanone
2-chloro-4-methyl-3-pentanone
2-butanone
  • Ketones are just below aldehydes in nomenclature
    priority.
  • A ketone group is named as an oxo substituent
    in an aldehyde.

An olefinic ketone is named as an enone,
literally -alken--one.
4-methyl-2-cyclohexen-1-one
3-oxopentanal
12
Common Names of Ketones
  • The two alkyl groups attached to the carbonyl are
    named and the word ketone is added as a
    separate word. It is literally alkyl alkyl
    ketone.
  • The alkyl groups are listed alphabetically or in
    order of increasing size.
  • As with aldehydes, substituents locations are
    given in common names using Greek letters (?, ?,
    ?, ?, ?, ?.) beginning with the a-carbon.

methyl isobutyl ketone (MIBK)
g-methoxypropyl phenyl ketone
?-chloroethyl isopropyl ketone
Some historic names persist
acetophenone
benzophenone
benzaldehyde
13
Nomenclature Practice
  • Name these in IUPAC and, where possible, common
    nomenclature.

(I) 1-phenyl-2-propanone
(I) 4-fluorocyclohexane-1-carbaldehyde
(c) methyl benzyl ketone
  • Draw the structures of the following compounds.
  • butanedial bromomethyl b-bromoethyl
    ketone 2,4-pentanedione
  • And these

(I) 2-butenal
(I) 3-buten-2-one
(c) methyl vinyl ketone
14
Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
  1. Mild oxidation of 1 Alcohols (with anhydrous
    oxidants, PCC in CHCl2 or Collins reagent (CrO3
    in pyridine).

1,3-cyclobutanedicarbaldehyde
Dry ice (solid CO2) sublimes at 78C.
  • Reduction of acid chlorides,esters, and nitriles.

acid chloride
Only 1 equivalent of very cold DIBAH is used to
avoid further reduction of the aldehyde to an
alcohol.
ester
nitrile
15
Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
  • Recall that 1 alcohols are readily oxidized to
    carboxylic acids by most oxidants in aqueous
    media.
  • In non aqueous media, moderate to strong oxidants
    become mild, oxidizing 1 alcohols only as far as
    the aldehyde.
  • Carboxylic acids can be reduced to 1 alcohols
    with LiAlH4, but no reagent has been found that
    will stop the reduction at the aldehyde.

16
Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
  • Carboxylic acids are difficult to reduce and any
    reducing agent strong enough to reduce them,
    e.g., LiAlH4, will not stop at the aldehyde but
    always produces the 1 alcohol.
  • Several derivatives of carboxylic acids can be
    reduced to aldehydes under carefully controlled
    conditions.
  • Acid chlorides, esters, and nitriles are reduced
    to aldehydes using very cold conditions (-78C)
    and only 1 equivalent of a mild reducing agent,
    diisobutylaluminum hydride DIBAH (usually in
    toluene).
  • DIBAH is weaker than LiAlH4. DIBAH is neutral
    LiAlH4 is ionic.
  • DIBAH is similar to AlH3 but is hindered by its
    bulky isobutyl groups.
  • Only one mole of H- is released per mole of
    DIBAH.

17
Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
  • Study the following examples and note which
    groups are displaced by the hydride (H-) from
    DIBAH.
  • Write equations showing the preparation of
  • pentanal from 1-pentanol
  • butanal from an ester
  • benzaldehyde from a nitrile

18
Preparation of Ketones (4 Methods)
  1. Oxidation of 2 Alcohols with mild (anhydrous)
    oxidants, moderate, or strong oxidants, e.g.,
    H2CrO4, HNO3, KMnO4, NaOCl, etc.

4-t-butylcyclohexanone
  1. Friedel Crafts Acylation of Aromatics yields
    ketones when an acid chloride is used as the
    electrophile.

1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanone
  1. Hydration of Alkynes with Hg2 and H3O yields
    an enol, that tautomerizes to a ketone.

2-octanone
19
Preparation of Ketones (4 Methods)
  • Acid Chlorides Lithium Dialkyl Copper (Gilman
    Reagent) produces ketones.
  • The reaction is unique to these two reagents and
    the mechanism is uncertain. As with DIBAH for
    aldehyde reductions, a low temperature (-78? C)
    solvent (ether) is used to prevent further alkyl
    addition to the ketone to form an alcohol. (Acid
    chlorides are very good electrophiles).
  • Carboxylic acids, esters, anhydrides and amides
    are not reduced by diorganocopper reagents. They
    are not as reactive as acid chlorides.

2-heptanone
  • Recall that a stronger reducing reagent, such as
    a Grignard (RMgBr) will also reduce an acid
    chloride to a ketone, but reduction cannot be
    stopped here. The ketone is further reduced to
    an alcohol.

20
Preparation of Ketones Problems
  • Write equations to show how the following
    transformations can be carried out. Show all
    reagents and intermediate products.
  • 3-hexyne ? 3-hexanone
  • benzene ? m-bromoacetophenone
  • bromobenzene ? acetophenone
  • 1-methylcyclohexene ? 2-methylcyclohexanone

21
Preparation of Ketones Problems
  • Recall the effects of substituents on aromatic
    rings. They affect both the reactivity of
    aromatics and the position at which Electrophilic
    Aromatic Substitution (EAS) will occur.
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