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Ch.17 Alcohols and Phenols OH C An alcohol OH A phenol OH An enol - MeOH: wood alcohol: made from wood - industrial preparation of methanol: CO + 2H2 400oC Zinc oxide/chromia CH 3OH - Ethanol: fermentation of grains and sugars - industrial preparation of ethanol: H2C CH 2 + H 2O 250oC H3PO 4 CH 3CH 2OH - Phenols OH OH t-Bu t-Bu OH OH CO 2CH 3 OH R Phenol CH 3 BHT antioxidant food additive Methyl salicylate Urushiols (R = different C15 alkyl and alkenyl chains) allergenic constituents of poison oak and poison ivy 17.1 Nomenclature Alcohols H R C OH H R R C OH H A primary alcohol (1o) A secondary alcohol (2o) R R C OH R A tertiary alcohol (3o) step 1. select the longest carbon chain containing the OH group ; -e to -ol step 2. numbering: begin at the end nearer the OH step 3. list alphabetically OH 1 OH 2 OH 2 2-Methyl-2-pentanol 1 OH cis-1,4-Cyclohexanediol 3-Phenyl-2-butanol common names; OH HO tert-Butyl alcohol (2-Methyl-2-propanol) OH Benzyl alcohol (Phenylmethalol) OH Ethtylene glycol (1,2-Ethanediol) OH Allyl alcohol (2-Propen-1-ol) HO OH OH Glycerol (1,2,3-Propanetriol) Phenols: name as aromatic compounds, -phenol NO 2 OH OH H 3C p-Methylphenol O 2N 2,4-Dinitrophenol 17.2 Properties of Alcohols and Phenols: Hydrogen Bonding alcohols, phenols, ethers are H2O derivatives H 3C O 109 H 3C H O CH 3 112o o Hydrogen bonding: numbering: begin at the end nearer the OH R R H δ+ O δ− H δ+ δ− O R H δ+ O δ− H-bonding: 5-10 kcal/mol - alcohols, phenols: high b.p., Hbonding must be destroyed to boil Boiling points: alcohols > chloroalkanes > alkanes (with same molecular weight) 17.3 Properties of Alcohols and Phenols : Acidty and Basicity - weak acid, weak base R O H H X R H O X- H an oxonium ion Alkoxide ion (RO-), phenoxide ion (PhO-) H H O O H + H + H OR H H O H Y H O H O - + H OR O H + Y Alcohols are weakly acidic Phenols are much more acidic: resonance stabilization of phenoxide ion Alcohol Phenol t-BuOH EtOH H2O CH3OH CF3CH2OH p-Aminophenol p-Methoxyphenol p-Methylphenol Phenol p-Chlorophenol p-Bromophenol p-Nitrophenol 2,4,6-Trinitrophenol pKa 18.00 16.00 15.74 15.54 12.43 10.46 10.21 10.17 9.89 9.38 9.35 7.15 0.60 stronger acid - The effects of alkyl substituents on alcohol acidity ; primarily solvation effects of alkoxide ion (easily solvated ions by water are more stable, therefore, more acidic) ; less hindered ions are easily solvated, hindered ions are less solvated and less stabilized sterically accessible; H less hindered and C O- more easily solvated H H H H sterically less accessible; pKa = 15.54 H C H C OH C H C H H H pKa = 18.00 more hindered and less easily solvated Inductive effects; ; electron withdrawing substituents stabilize alkoxide ions F 3C H 3C H 3C C H 3C pKa = 18 O - C F 3C F 3C pKa = 5.4 O- - alcohols are unreactive to weak bases such as amine, bicarbonate ion - react to only a limited extent with RONa and NaOH - react with alkali metals 2 CH3OH + 2 Na 2 CH3ONa + H2 2 t-BuOH + 2K 2 t-BuOK + H2 Potassium tert-butoxide - alkoxides are frequently used as reagent bases - react with strong bases such as NaH, NaNH2, RMgX, RLi CH 3OH + NaH ROH + NaNH 2 ROH + CH 3MgBr CH 3ONa + H2 RONa + NH 3 ROMgBr + CH 4 - phenols are deprotonated by aq.NaOH ; phenols are soluble in dilute aq.NaOH solution OH + NaOH ONa + H 2O Sodium phenoxide resonance stabilization of phenoxide ion O O O O O substituent effects of phenols O O EDG EWG less acidic more acidic resonance stabilization of p-nitro phenoxide ion; O O O N O O N O O N O O O O O N O O N O O O N O 17.4 Preparation of Alcohols: A Review O R R R R R O R OH R' O R RX RCHO OR' ROH ROR' Hydration of alkene: H2O Hg(OAc)2 CH3 OH NaBH4 CH3 OH HgOAc CH3 BH3 CH3 BR2 - OOH CH3 OH Dihydroxylation of alkene: H3C O O Os O O OsO4 Pyridine NaHSO3 H2O H CH3 RCO3H CH3 H3O + CH3 OH OH CH3 OH O OH 17.5 Alcohols from Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds Hydride reduction: O C [H-] [H-] = NaBH4, LiAlH4 OH C H [H-] is a generalized reducing agent Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones R O C [H-] H aldehyde R O C primary alcohol [H-] R ketone OH R C H H OH R C H R secondary alcohol Reduction of Aldehydes O 1. NaBH4 H OH EtOH 2. H3O+ 4 O 2. H3O+ B- Na+ Reduction of Ketones O OH 1. NaBH4 EtOH 2. H3O+ Reduction with LiAlH4; much more reactive, reacts violently with water OH O 1. LiAlH4 ether 2. H3O+ O - 1. H O + 2. H3O H OH H Reduction of Esters and Carboxylic Acids: need strong hydride reagent ; LiAlH4 ; NaBH4 reduces esters very slowly and cannot reduce carboxylic acid at all R O C OR' ester or R O C acid [H-] OH OH R C H H primary alcohol O 1. LiAlH4 OH O OH ether 2. H3O+ 1. LiAlH4 OCH3 ether 2. H3O+ OH + CH3OH 17.6 Alcohols from Reaction of Carbonyl Compounds with Grignard Reagents Grignard reagent: R-X + Mg R-Mg-X R = 1o, 2o, 3o alkyl, aryl, alkenyl X = Cl, Br, I O MgX O + RMgX R H3O+ OH R + MgXOH Alcohol synthesis O MgBr 1. H CH2OH H 2. H3O+ OH CHO 1. PhMgBr 2. H3O+ O OH 1. PhMgBr 2. H3O+ Ph O OMe 1. excess PhMgBr O 2. H3O+ OH 2 Carboxylic acid: no addition reaction O R O R'MgBr OH R O-MgX acid salt + R'-H Limitations of Grignard reagents: good nucleophile, strong base Grignard reagents can't be prepared from an organohalide that has other reactive functional groups in the same molecule. - acidic protons are deprotonated - electrophilic functional groups react Br Molecule acidic groups FG FG = -OH, -NH, -SH, -COOH electrohilic groups FG = -CHO, COR, CONR2, CN, NO2, SO2R... 17.7 Some Reactions of Alcohols H O C O-H reactions C-O reactions Dehydration: 3o alcohol, strong acidic condition CH3 OH CH3 cat. H2SO4 H2O 50oC H2SO4, H2O + OH major Reactivity of dehydration: H R C OH H H R C OH R reactivity R R C OH R SN1 reaction: CH3 OH cat. H2SO4 CH3 H2O 50oC CH3 H3C O H H H H O 2 Dehydration under mild, basic condition CH3 OH CH3 POCl3 Pyridine 0oC OH O Cl P Cl Cl OPOCl2 H N Conversion of Alcohols into Alkyl Halides 3o alcohols: SN 1 CH3 OH HCl CH3 Cl H Cl CH3 O H H CH3 Cl- 1o and 2o alcohols: SOCl2, PBr3 by SN2 reaction RCH2 OH 3 RCH2 OH SOCl2 RCH2 PBr3 O O S Cl + HCl SN2 Cl- RCH2 O P(OR')2 + 3 HBr SN2 Br- RCH2 Cl + SO2 + HCl 3 RCH2 Br + P(OH)3 Conversion of Alcohols into Tosylates Activation of C-O bond RCH2 OH p-TolSO 2Cl RCH2 Pyridine p-TsCl or p-TolSO2Cl O O S Tol + HCl-Pyridine O O O S H3C Cl EtO - H OEt PBr3 Br H H O H (+)-1-Phenyl-2-propanol p-TsCl pyridine H O Ts EtOEtO H 17.8 Oxidation of Alcohols OH R C H R OH R C H H primary alcohol oxidation reduction [O] R O C R O C R [O] H aldehyde R O C OH carboxylic acid OH R C H R [O] R secondary alcohol OH R C R R tertiary alcohol O C R ketone [O] NO reaction CrO3, H2Cr2O7, Na2Cr2O7 Pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC): CrO3 + pyridine + HCl PCC R CH2OH R CH2OH CH2Cl2 R CHO CrO3 H3O + OH R COOH O PCC CH2Cl2 or Na2Cr2O7 H2O, CH3COOH Mechanism: chromate intermediate, E2 H O C O O Cr O O H Cr(VI) H HO O Cr O C O Cr O O O C H H E2 O HO Cr O Cr(IV) + O C base 17.9 Protection of Alcohols Mg HO Br ether HO MgBr not formed acidic proton Protecting group: HO Br PO Mg PO Br ether MgBr Trimethylsilyl (TMS) ether: Et3N, ClSi(CH3)3 ROH + CH3 H3C Si Cl CH3 Et3N R O Si + Et3N-HCl R OTMS OH TMSCl Et3N OSiMe3 OTMS Silyl ether can be formed with tertiary Si-Cl: SN2 at tertiary center - silicon is 3rd -row atom, larger than C, form longer Si-C bond - sterically less hindered CH3 Cl C CH3 CH3 C-C bond length: 154 pm CH3 Cl Si CH3 silicon is less hindered CH3 C-Si bond length: 195 pm Deprotection of TMS ether: labile to acid and F- (strong F-Si bond) OSiMe3 H3O+ OH or F+ (CH3)3SiOH TMS-protected alcohol in Grignard reaction (CH3)4SiCl HO Br Mg TMSO Et3N MgBr OH R OH 2. H3O + ether OH 1. RCHO TMSO Br R OTMS For H3O+ 17.10 Preparation and Uses of Phenols Used as: raw material for picric acid (2,4,6-trinitrophenl), Bakelite resin, adhesives for binding plywood Dow process: chlorobenzene + NaOH at high temperature Synthesis of phenol from cumene: produce phenol and acetone H3C H OOH CH3 H3C CH3 O2 heat + H3O OH O + H3C CH3 Radical mechanism H3C H H CH3 O H O H3C OOH H3C CH3 CH3 H3O+ O O O H2O H2O H OH O + H3C CH3 OH2 O H O O Synthesis of phenols from sulfonic acid SO3H CH3 OH SO3 1. NaOH H2SO4 300oC CH3 2. H3O+ CH3 72% other use of phenol OH Cl Cl Cl Cl OCH 2COOH Cl OH Cl Cl Cl Pentachlorophenol wood presertive Cl Cl 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid OH t-Bu t-Bu ClCl Cl Hexachlorophene 2,4-D (herbicide) OH OH antiseptic OH OH t-Bu H+ CH 3 t-Bu CH 3 BHT antioxidant food additive OCH3 OCH3 BHA 17.11 Reactions of Phenols Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions Br2, FeBr3 OH Br OH HNO3, H2SO4 OH NO2 SO3, H2SO4 OH SO3H Alcohol-like reactions of phenols: no dehydration, no reaction with HCl, H2SO4 OH K2CO3 On-Bu NO2 acetone n-BuBr NO2 Oxidation of Phenols - Na2Cr2O7, Fremy's salt [potassium nitrosodisulfonate, (KSO3)2NO)] - quinones are reduced to hydroquinone by NaBH4 or SnCl2. O OH OH (KSO3)2NO SnCl2 H2O Fremy's salt O Benzoquinone OH Hydroquinone - hydroquinone is used as photographic developer: reduces Ag+ on film to metallic silver O CH3 MeO Ubiquinone: coenzyme Q biological oxidizing agent MeO n H O Ubiquinones (n = 1 - 10) OH O MeO CH3 MeO MeO R MeO CH3 + NADH + H + reduced form OH O OH MeO O CH3 + MeO R OH R + NAD+ oxidized form 1 2 MeO CH3 O2 + H2O MeO R O 17.12 Spectroscopy of Alcohols and Phenols IR Spectroscopy O-H stretching C-O stretching 3600 cm-1 - non hydrogen bonded alcohol 3300-3400 cm-1 - hydrogen bonded alcohol 1050 cm-1 OH NMR Spectroscopy 1H NMR 13C NMR C-H-(OH) O-H C-OH - 3.5-4.5 ppm - no coupling with nearby C-H - 50-80 ppm O-H proton signal: unpredictable chemical shift, often not observed HA C O H H C O H H + HA no coupling Deuterium exchange: O-H proton signal disappears rapidly C O H H D2O C O D H + HDO MS Spectrometry Alchols: fragment in two pathways alpha (α) cleavage RH2C C OH C OH + RCH2 dehydration OH H C C C C + H2O Chemistry @ Work Ethyl Alcohol: Chemical, Drug, and Poison Fermentation: alcoholic beverage C6H12O6 Yeast 2 EtOH + 2 CO2 A carbohydrate Hydration of ethylene: industrial production H2C CH2 + H2O acid catalyst EtOH Chemistry @ Work Ethyl Alcohol: Chemical, Drug, and Poison Metabolism CH3CH2OH CH3CHO CH3COOH Acetaldehyde Acetic acid toxic - test of blood alcohol concentration: oxidation test with K2Cr2O7 Problem Sets Chapter 17 26, 31, 36, 44, 52, 57, 64