Title: Chapter 19 Carboxylic Acids
1Chapter 19Carboxylic Acids
219.2Structure and Bonding
3Formic Acid Is Planar
4Electron Delocalization
- Stabilizes carbonyl group
519.3Physical Properties
6Boiling Points
bp (1 atm)
31C
80C
99C
- Intermolecular forces, especially hydrogen
bonding, are stronger in carboxylic acids than in
other compounds of similar shape and molecular
weight
7Hydrogen-Bonded Dimers
- Acetic acid exists as a hydrogen-bonded dimer in
the gas phase. The hydroxyl group of each
molecule is hydrogen-bonded to the carbonyl
oxygen of the other.
8Hydrogen-Bonded Dimers
- Acetic acid exists as a hydrogen-bonded dimer in
the gas phase. The hydroxyl group of each
molecule is hydrogen-bonded to the carbonyl
oxygen of the other.
9Solubility in Water
- Carboxylic acids are similar to alcohols with
respect to their solubility in water. - Form hydrogen bonds to water.
1019.4Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
- Most carboxylic acids have a pKa close to 5.
11Carboxylic Acids Are Weak Acids
- But carboxylic acids are far more acidic than
alcohols.
CH3CH2OH
pKa 4.7
pKa 16
12Free Energies of Ionization
CH3CH2O H
?G 91 kJ/mol
?G 27 kJ/mol
CH3CH2OH
13Greater Acidity of Carboxylic Acids Is Due
toStabilization of Carboxylate Ion
Inductive effect of carbonyl group
Resonance stabilization of carboxylate ion
14Electrostatic Potential Maps ofAcetic Acid and
Acetate Ion
Acetic acid
Acetate ion
1519.6Substituents and Acid Strength
16Substituent Effects on Acidity
Standard of comparison is acetic acid (X H)
pKa 4.7
17Substituent Effects on Acidity
18Substituent Effects on Acidity
- Electronegative substituents withdraw electrons
from carboxyl group increase K for loss of H.
19Effect of Electronegative Substituent
Decreasesas Number of Bonds between It and
Carboxyl Group Increases.
pKa
ClCH2CH2CH2CO2H
2019.7Ionization ofSubstituted Benzoic Acids
21Hybridization Effect
- sp2-Hybridized carbon is more electron-withdrawin
g than sp3, and sp is more electron-withdrawing
than sp2.
22Ionization of Substituted Benzoic Acids
- Effect is small unless X is electronegative
effect is largest for ortho substituent.
pKa Substituent Ortho Meta Para H 4.2 4.2 4.2 CH
3 3.9 4.3 4.4 F 3.3 3.9 4.1 Cl 2.9 3.8 4.0 CH3O 4.
1 4.1 4.5 NO2 2.2 3.5 3.4
2319.10Sources of Carboxylic Acids
24Synthesis of Carboxylic Acids Review
- Side-chain oxidation of alkylbenzenes (11.13)
- Oxidation of primary alcohols (15.10)
- Oxidation of aldehydes (17.15)
25Synthesis of Carboxylic Acids Review
2619.11Synthesis of Carboxylic Acidsby
theCarboxylation of Grignard Reagents
27Carboxylation of Grignard Reagents
Mg
CO2
RMgX
RX
diethylether
H3O
- Converts an alkyl (or aryl) halide to a
carboxylic acid having one more carbon atom than
the starting halide.
28Carboxylation of Grignard Reagents
?
C
O
29Example Alkyl Halide
1. Mg, diethyl ether
2. CO2 3. H3O
Cl
CO2H
(76-86)
30Example Aryl Halide
1. Mg, diethyl ether
2. CO2 3. H3O
(82)
3119.12Synthesis of Carboxylic Acidsby
thePreparation and Hydrolysis of Nitriles
32Preparation and Hydrolysis of Nitriles
H3O
RX
heat
SN2
NH4
- Converts an alkyl halide to a carboxylic acid
having one more carbon atom than the starting
halide. - Limitation is that the halide must be reactive
toward substitution by SN2 mechanism.
33Example
NaCN
DMSO
(92)
34Example Dicarboxylic Acid
BrCH2CH2CH2Br
NaCN
H2O
(77-86)
NCCH2CH2CH2CN
35Example ?-Hydroxy Acid from Ketone via
Cyanohydrin
1. NaCN
2. H
H2O,
HCl, heat
2-Hydroxy-2-methylpentanoic acid, an ?-hydroxy
acid (60 from 2-pentanone)
3619.13Reactions of Carboxylic AcidsA Review and
a Preview
37Reactions of Carboxylic Acids
Reactions already discussed
- Acidity (19.4, 19.5-19.7)
- Reaction with thionyl chloride (12.7 will also
see in 20.4) - Reduction with LiAlH4 (15.3)
- Acid-catalyzed esterification (15.8)
38Reactions of Carboxylic Acids Review
39Reactions of Carboxylic Acids Review
4019.14Mechanism of Acid-Catalyzed
Esterification(Fischer Esterification)
41Acid-Catalyzed Esterification
CH3OH
H2O
- Important fact the oxygen of the alcohol
isincorporated into the ester as shown.
42Mechanism of Fischer Esterification
- The mechanism involves two stages
- 1) Formation of tetrahedral intermediate (3
steps) - 2) Dissociation of tetrahedral intermediate
(3 steps)
43Mechanism of Fischer Esterification
- The mechanism involves two stages
- 1) Formation of tetrahedral intermediate (3
steps) - 2) Dissociation of tetrahedral intermediate
(3 steps)
Tetrahedral intermediate in esterification of
benzoic acid with methanol
44First Stage Formation of Tetrahedral Intermediate
CH3OH
- Methanol adds to the carbonyl group of the
carboxylic acid. - The tetrahedral intermediate is analogous to a
hemiacetal.
H
45Second Stage Conversion of TetrahedralIntermedia
te to Ester
H2O
- This stage corresponds to an acid-catalyzed
dehydration.
H
46Mechanism of FormationofTetrahedral Intermediate
47Step 1
48Step 1
- Carbonyl oxygen is protonated because cation
produced is stabilized by electron delocalization
(resonance).
49Step 2
50Step 3
51Tetrahedral IntermediatetoEster Stage
52Step 4
53Step 5
54Step 6
55Key Features of Mechanism
- Activation of carbonyl group by protonation of
carbonyl oxygen. - Nucleophilic addition of alcohol to carbonyl
groupforms tetrahedral intermediate. - Elimination of water from tetrahedral
intermediate restores carbonyl group.
56Review of Fischer Esterification
57Industrial Use of Fischer Esterification Synthesi
s of Dacron Polyester
http//heritage.dupont.com/touchpoints/tp_1950/ove
rview.shtml
58A Waste of Good Chemistry
5919.15Intramolecular Ester FormationLactones
60Lactones
- Lactones are cyclic esters.
- Formed by intramolecular esterification in
acompound that contains a hydroxyl group anda
carboxylic acid function.
61Example
H2O
4-Hydroxybutanoic acid
4-Butanolide
- IUPAC nomenclature replace the -oic acid ending
of the carboxylic acid by -olide. - Identify the oxygenated carbon by number.
62Examples
H2O
4-Hydroxybutanoic acid
4-Butanolide
63Common names
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
?-Butyrolactone
?-Valerolactone
- Ring size is designated by Greek letter.
- A ? lactone has a five-membered ring.
- A ? lactone has a six-membered ring.
64Lactones
- Reactions designed to give hydroxy acids often
yield the corresponding lactone, especially if
theresulting ring is 5- or 6-membered.
65Example
5-hexanolide (78)
66Section 19.18Spectroscopic Analysis
ofCarboxylic Acids
67Infrared Spectroscopy
- A carboxylic acid is characterized by peaks due
toOH and CO groups in its infrared spectrum. - CO stretching gives an intense absorptionnear
1700 cm-1. - OH peak is broad and overlaps with CH
absorptions.
68Infrared Spectrum of 4-Phenylbutanoic Acid
691H NMR
- Proton of OH group of a carboxylic acid is
normallythe least shielded of all of the protons
in 1HNMR spectra (? 10-12 ppm broad).
704-Phenylbutanoic Acid
Chemical shift (?, ppm)
7113C NMR
- Carbonyl carbon is at low field (? 160-185 ppm),
but not as deshielded as the carbonyl carbon of
an aldehyde or ketone (? 190-215 ppm).