Title: Chapter 14 Ethers, Epoxides, and Sulfides
1Chapter 14 Ethers, Epoxides, and Sulfides
Organic Chemistry, 5th EditionL. G. Wade, Jr.
- Modified from Jo Blackburn
- Richland College, Dallas, TX
- Dallas County Community College District
- ã 2003, Prentice Hall
2Introduction
- Formula R-O-R where R is alkyl or aryl.
- Symmetrical or unsymmetrical
- Examples
3Structure and Polarity
- Bent molecular geometry water like
- Oxygen is sp3 hybridized
- Tetrahedral angle
4Boiling Points
Similar to alkanes of comparable molecular weight.
5Hydrogen Bond Acceptor
- Ethers cannot H-bond to each other.
- In the presence of -OH or -NH (donor), the lone
pair of electrons from ether forms a hydrogen
bond with the -OH or -NH.
6Solvent Properties
- Nonpolar solutes dissolve better in ether than in
alcohol. - Ether has a large dipole moment, so polar solutes
also dissolve. - Ethers solvate cations.
- Ethers do not react with strong bases like the
alcohol H does.
7Ether Complexes
- Grignard reagents
- Ether is necessary
- Electrophiles
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9Common Names of Ethers
- Alkyl alkyl ether
- Current rule alphabetical order
- Old rule order of increasing complexity
- Symmetrical use dialkyl, or just alkyl.
- Examples
10IUPAC Names
- Alkoxy alkane use the more complex alkyl group
as the root.
t-butyl methyl ether or methyl t-butyl ether
2-methyl-2-methoxypropane
Methoxycyclohexane
gt
11Cyclic Ethers
- Heterocyclic noncarbon in the ring oxygen is in
ring.
(4 member ring)
(2 oxygen in 6 member ring)
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13Williamson Synthesis
- Alkoxide ion 1? alkyl bromide (or tosylate)
- (1) form alkoxide (2) SN2 attack of R-X
14Phenyl Ethers
- Phenoxide ions are easily produced for use in the
Williamson synthesis. - Phenyl halides or tosylates cannot be used in
this synthesis method.
15Alkoxymercuration-Demercuration
- Use mercuric acetate with an alcohol to add RO-H
to a double bond and form the Markovnikov product.
16- Industrial method, not good lab synthesis.
- Symmetrical Ethers
- Need unhindered primary alcohol.
- If temperature is too high or steric hindrance,
elimination is favored and alkene forms.
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20Cleavage of Ethers
- Ethers are unreactive toward base, so make good
solvents - Protonated ethers can undergo substitution
reactions with strong acids. - Alcohol leaving group is replaced by a halide.
- Reactivity HI gt HBr gtgt HCl
gt
21Mechanism for Cleavage
- Ether is protonated.
- Alcohol leaves as halide attacks.
- Alcohol reacts with HX to give another ROH
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27Sulfides (Thioethers)
- R-S-R, analog of ether
- Name like ethers, replacing sulfide for ether
in common name, or alkylthio for alkoxy in
IUPAC system. - More reactive than ethers!
28Thiols and Thiolates
- R-SH about same acidity as phenols.
- Thiolates are better nucleophiles, weaker
bases, than alkoxides.
29Epoxides
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31Naming Epoxides
- Epoxy attachment to parent compound,
- 1,2-epoxy-cyclohexane
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33Synthesis of Epoxides
34Synthesis of Epoxides
- Cyclization of Halohydrin
- Alkoxide ion and halide in same molecule.
35Synthesis of Epoxides
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37Ring Opening in Acidmore reactive than ethers
due to ring-strain
- Trans diol formed in water solvent.
- Alkoxy alcohol formed in alcohol solvent.
- 1,2-Dihalide formed with HI or HBr.
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39Ring Opening in Base
- Epoxides high ring strain makes it susceptible
to nucleophilic attack.
40Epoxide Opening in Base
- aqueous hydroxide, a trans 1,2-diol is formed.
- With alkoxide in alcohol, a trans 1,2-alkoxy
alcohol is formed.
41Write out the Mechanism(s)
42Orientation of Epoxide Opening
- Base attacks the least hindered carbon.
- In acid, the nucleophile attacks the protonated
- epoxide at the most substituted carbon.
43Reaction with Grignard and R-Li
- Strong base opens the epoxide ring by attacking
the less hindered carbon.
44End of Chapter 14
45For Wednesday
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