Title: Lectures 22 and 23
1Lectures 22 and 23
- Alcohols and Ethers
- Chapter 8
2Alcohols and Phenols
- Alcohols contain an OH group connected to a a
saturated C (sp3) - They are important solvents and synthesis
intermediates - Methanol, CH3OH, called methyl alcohol, is a
common solvent, a fuel additive, produced in
large quantities - Ethanol, CH3CH2OH, called ethyl alcohol, is a
solvent, fuel, beverage - Phenols contain an OH group connected to a carbon
in a benzene ring - Phenol, C6H5OH (phenyl alcohol) has diverse
uses - it gives its name to the general class of
compounds
3Naming Alcohols
- General classifications of alcohols based on
substitution on C to which OH is attached - Methyl (C has 3 Hs), Primary (1) (C has two
Hs, one R), secondary (2) (C has one H, two
Rs), tertiary (3) (C has no H, 3 Rs),
4IUPAC Rules for Naming Alcohols
- Select the longest carbon chain containing the
hydroxyl group, and derive the parent name by
replacing the -e ending of the corresponding
alkane with -ol - Number the chain from the end nearer the hydroxyl
group - Number substituents according to position on
chain, listing the substituents in alphabetical
order
5Properties of Alcohols and Phenols Hydrogen
Bonding
- The structure around O of the alcohol or phenol
is similar to that in water, sp3 hybridized - Alcohols and phenols have much higher boiling
points than similar alkanes and alkyl halides
6Alcohols Form Hydrogen Bonds
- A positively polarized ?OH hydrogen atom from one
molecule is attracted to a lone pair of electrons
on a negatively polarized oxygen atom of another
molecule - This produces a force that holds the two
molecules together - These intermolecular attractions are present in
solution but not in the gas phase, thus elevating
the boiling point of the solution
7Properties of Alcohols and Phenols Acidity and
Basicity
- Weakly basic and weakly acidic
- Alcohols are weak Brønsted bases
- Protonated by strong acids to yield oxonium ions,
ROH2
8Alchols and Phenols are Weak Brønsted Acids
- Can transfer a proton to water to a very small
extent - Produces H3O and an alkoxide ion, RO?, or a
phenoxide ion, ArO?
9Brønsted Acidity Measurements
- The acidity constant, Ka, measure the extent to
which a Brønsted acid transfers a proton to water - and pKa ?log Ka
-
- Relative acidities are more conveniently
presented on a logarithmic scale, pKa, which is
directly proportional to the free energy of the
equilibrium - Differences in pKa correspond to differences in
free energy - Table 8.1 presents a range of acids and their pKa
values
10pKa Values for Typical OH Compounds
11Generating Alkoxides from Alcohols
- Alcohols are weak acids requires a strong base
to form an alkoxide such as NaH, sodium amide
NaNH2, and Grignard reagents (RMgX) - Alkoxides are bases used as reagents in organic
chemistry
12Phenol Acidity
- Phenols (pKa 10) are much more acidic than
alcohols (pKa 16) due to resonance
stabilization of the phenoxide ion - Phenols react with NaOH solutions (but alcohols
do not), forming soluble salts that are soluble
in dilute aqueous - A phenolic component can be separated from an
organic solution by extraction into basic
aqueous solution and is isolated after acid is
added to the solution
13Nitro-Phenols
- Phenols with nitro groups at the ortho and para
positions are much stronger acids - The pKa of 2,4,6-trinitrophenol is 0.6, a very
strong acid
14Preparation of Alchols an Overview
- Alcohols are derived from many types of compounds
- The alcohol hydroxyl can be converted to many
other functional groups - This makes alcohols useful in synthesis
15Review Preparation of Alcohols by Regiospecific
Hydration of Alkenes
- Hydroboration/oxidation syn, non-Markovnikov
hydration - Oxymercuration/reduction Markovnikov hydration
16Alcohols from Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds
- Reduction of a carbonyl compound in general gives
an alcohol - Note that organic reduction reactions add the
equivalent of H2 to a molecule
17Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones
- Aldehydes gives primary alcohols
- Ketones gives secondary alcohols
18Reduction Reagent Sodium Borohydride
- NaBH4 is not sensitive to moisture and it does
not reduce other common functional groups - Lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4) is more
powerful, less specific, and very reactive with
water - Both add the equivalent of H
19Mechanism of Reduction
- The reagent adds the equivalent of hydride to the
carbon of CO and polarizes the group as well
20Reduction of Carboxylic Acids and Esters
- Carboxylic acids and esters are reduced to give
primary alcohols - LiAlH4 is used because NaBH4 is not effective
21Alcohols from Reaction of Carbonyl Compounds with
Grignard Reagents
- Alkyl, aryl, and vinylic halides react with
magnesium in ether or tetrahydrofuran to generate
Grignard reagents, RMgX - Grignard reagents react with carbonyl compounds
to yield alcohols
22Examples of Reactions of Grignard Reagents with
Carbonyl Compounds
23Mechanism of the Addition of a Grignard Reagent
- Grignard reagents act as nucleophilic carbon
anions (carbanions, R?) in adding to a
carbonyl group - The intermediate alkoxide is then protonated to
produce the alcohol
24Some Reactions of Alcohols
- Two general classes of reaction
- At the carbon of the CO bond
- At the proton of the OH bond
25Dehydration of Alcohols to Yield Alkenes
- The general reaction forming an alkene from an
alcohol through loss of O-H and H (hence
dehydration) of the neighboring CH to give ?
bond - Specific reagents are needed
26Acid- Catalyzed Dehydration
- Tertiary alcohols are readily dehydrated with
acid - Secondary alcohols require severe conditions (75
H2SO4, 100C) - sensitive molecules don't survive - Primary alcohols require very harsh conditions
impractical - Reactivity is the result of the nature of the
carbocation intermediate
27Conversion of Alcohols into Alkyl Halides
- 3 alcohols are converted by HCl or HBr at low
temperature - 1 and alcohols are resistant to acid use SOCl2
or PBr3 by an SN2 mechanism
28Conversion of Alcohols into Tosylates
- Reaction with p-toluenesulfonyl chloride (tosyl
chloride, p-TosCl) in pyridine yields alkyl
tosylates, ROTos - Formation of the tosylate does not involve the
CO bond so configuration at a chirality center
is maintained - Alkyl tosylates react like alkyl halides
29Stereochemical Uses of Tosylates
- The SN2 reaction of an alcohol via a tosylate,
produces inversion at the chirality center - The SN2 reaction of an alcohol via an alkyl
halide proceeds with two inversions, giving
product with same arrangement as starting alcohol
30Oxidation of Alcohols
- Can be accomplished by inorganic reagents, such
as KMnO4, CrO3, and Na2Cr2O7 or by more
selective, expensive reagents
31Oxidation of Primary Alcohols
- To aldehyde pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC,
C5H6NCrO3Cl) in dichloromethane - Other reagents produce carboxylic acids
32Oxidation of Secondary Alcohols
- Effective with inexpensive reagents such as
Na2Cr2O7 in acetic acid - PCC is used for sensitive alcohols at lower
temperatures
33Mechanism of Chromic Acid Oxidation
- Alcohol forms a chromate ester followed by
elimination with electron transfer to give
ketone. - The mechanism was determined by observing the
effects of isotopes on rates
34Reactions of Phenols
- The hydroxyl group is a strongly activating,
making phenols substrates for electrophilic
halogenation, nitration, sulfonation, and
FriedelCrafts reactions - Reaction of a phenol with strong oxidizing agents
yields a quinone - Fremy's salt (KSO3)2NO works under mild
conditions through a radical mechanism
35Quinones in Nature
- Ubiquinones mediate electron-transfer processes
involved in energy production through their redox
reactions
36Summary -Alcohols
- Synthesis
- Reduction of aldehydes and ketones
- Addition of Grignard reagents to aldehydes and
ketones - Reactions
- Conversion to alkyl halides
- Dehydration
- Oxidation
37Summary - Phenols
- Much more acidic (pKa ? 10) than alcohols
- Substitution of the aromatic ring by an
electron-withdrawing group increases phenol
acidity - Substitution by an electron-donating group
decreases acidity - Oxidized to quinones
- Quinones are reduced to hydroquinones
38Ethers and Their Relatives
- An ether has two organic groups (alkyl, aryl, or
vinyl) bonded to the same oxygen atom, ROR? - Diethyl ether is used industrially as a solvent
- Tetrahydrofuran (THF) is a solvent that is a
cyclic ether - Thiols (RSH) and sulfides (RSR?) are sulfur
(for oxygen) analogs of alcohols and ethers
39Naming Ethers
- Simple ethers are named by identifying the two
organic substituents and adding the word ether - If other functional groups are present, the ether
part is considered an alkoxy substituent
40Structure, Properties, and Sources of Ethers
- ROR tetrahedral bond angle (112 in dimethyl
ether) - Oxygen is sp3-hybridized
- Oxygen atom gives ethers a slight dipole moment
- Diethyl ether prepared industrially by sulfuric
acidcatalyzed dehydration of ethanol also with
other primary alcohols
41The Williamson Ether Synthesis
- Reaction of metal alkoxides and primary alkyl
halides and tosylates - Best method for the preparation of ethers
- Alkoxides prepared by reaction of an alcohol with
a strong base such as sodium hydride, NaH
42Cyclic Ethers
- Cyclic ethers behave like acyclic ethers, except
if ring is 3-membered - Dioxane and tetrahydrofuran are used as solvents
43Epoxides (Oxiranes)
- Three membered ring ether is called an oxirane
(root ir from tri for 3-membered prefix ox
for oxygen ane for saturated) - Also called epoxides
- Ethylene oxide (oxirane 1,2-epoxyethane) is
industrially important as an intermediate - Prepared by reaction of ethylene with oxygen at
300 C and silver oxide catalyst
44Preparation of Epoxides Using a Peroxyacid
- Treat an alkene with a peroxyacid
45Ring-Opening Reactions of Epoxides
- Water adds to epoxides with dilute acid at room
temperature - Product is a 1,2-diol (on adjacent Cs vicinal)
- Mechanism acid protonates oxygen and water adds
to opposite side (trans addition)
46Ethylene Glycol
- 1,2-ethanediol from acid catalyzed hydration of
ethylene - Widely used as automobile antifreeze (lowers
freezing point of water solutions)
47Base-Catalyzed Epoxide Opening
- Strain of the three-membered ring is relieved on
ring-opening - Hydroxide cleaves epoxides at elevated
temperatures to give trans 1,2-diols
48Addition of Grignards to Ethylene Oxide
- Adds CH2CH2OH to the Grignard reagents
hydrocarbon chain - Acyclic and other larger ring ethers do not react
49Thiols and Sulfides
- Thiols (RSH), are sulfur analogs of alcohols
- Named with the suffix -thiol
- SH group is called mercapto group (capturer of
mercury)
50Sulfides
- Sulfides (RSR?), are sulfur analogs of ethers
- Named by rules used for ethers, with sulfide in
place of ether for simple compounds and alkylthio
in place of alkoxy
51Oxidation of Thiols to Disulfides
- Reaction of an alkyl thiol (RSH) with bromine or
iodine gives a disulfide (RSSR) - The thiol is oxidized in the process and the
halogen is reduced
52Sulfides
- Thiolates (RS?) are formed by the reaction of a
thiol with a base - Thiolates react with primary or secondary alkyl
halide to give sulfides (RSR) - Thiolates are excellent nucleophiles and react
with many electrophiles
53Sulfides as Nucleophiles
- Sulfur compounds are more nucleophilic than their
oxygen-compound analogs - 3p electrons valence electrons (on S) are less
tightly held than 2p electrons (on O) - Sulfides react with primary alkyl halides (SN2)
to give trialkylsulfonium salts (R3S)
54Oxidation of Sulfides
- Sulfides are easily oxidized with H2O2 to the
sulfoxide (R2SO) - Oxidation of a sulfoxide with a peroxyacid yields
a sulfone (R2SO2) - Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is often used as a
polar aprotic solvent
55For Next Class
- Read Chapter 9
- Carbonyl compounds