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Power Point to Accompany Principles and Applications of Inorganic, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Denniston, Topping, and Caret 4th ed Chapter 13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 13-1 Formulas Alcohols have the general formula R-OH Ethers have the formula R-O-R R can be aliphatic or aromatic Phenols have the formula Ar-OH Ar must be an aromatic ring (eg. Benzene) Thiols have the formula R-SH Disulfides have the formula R-S-S-R R may be aliphatic or aromatic 13-2 13.1 Alcohol: Structure and Properties Low molecular weight alcohols (up to 5-6 carbons) are soluble in water because they are polar and hydrogen bond (through the OH) with the water molecule. Eg. CH3CH2OH solube but CH3OCH3 barely soluble. CH3CH2CH2CH2OH, 7 g per 100 mL but HOCH2CH2CH2CH2OH is very soluble! (two OH groups) 13-3 Alcohol Boiling Pts Alcohols have abnormally high bp relative to their molecular weights due to their ability to hydrogen bond. CH3 CH2 H O CH3CH H 2O H O CH2 CH3 13-4 Alcohol Boiling Pts-2 Trends in boiling points (Similar MW) CH3CH2CH3 bp -42 oC bp -23 oC CH3O CH3 CH3CH2OH bp +78.5 oC 13-5 13.2 Alcohols: Nomenclature IUPAC: based on the longest chain containing the OH carbon. The e of the alkane name is replaced with ol. The chain is numbered from the end giving the OH carbon the lower number. The name is prefixed with the number indicating the position of the OH group. For cyclic alcohols, the OH is at C-1. 13-6 Alcohols: names-2 Name the alcohols. CH3 CH3CH CH CH3 OH CH3 OH 3-methyl-2-butanol 3-methylcyclohexanol OH must be at C-1 13-7 Alcohols: names-3 The common names for alcohols consist of the alkyl group name, a space, and the word alcohol. Name: CH3 CH3 C CH3 CH3CH CH3 OH OH t-butyl alcohol isopropyl alcohol 13-8 13.3 Alcohol Examples of Interest CH3CH2OH HO CH2CH2OH ethyl alcohol (drinking alcohol) ethylene glycol (antifreeze) OH HO CH2CH CH2OH glycerol (in fats, a moisturizer) 13-9 13.4 Classes of Alcohols CH3CH2OH CH3CH CH3 OH CH3 CH3 C CH3 OH Primary: one R group on alcohol C Secondary: Two R groups on alcohol C Tertiary: Three R groups on alcohol C 13-10 13.5 Reactions Involving Alcohols: prep 1. Form alkenes by adding water (hydration) Major Product CH3 CH CH2 H2O, H+ OH CH3 CH CH3 OH CH3 CH2 CH2 13-11 Alcohols Rxns: prep 2. Form aldehydes/ketones by reduction hydrogenation with H2. o 2 O OH H2, CH3 C CH3 Pt/Pd/Ni CH3 CH CH3 O H, 1o OH 2 CH3 C H Pt/Pd/Ni CH3 CH2 13-12 Alcohols: reactions 1. Alcohols dehydrate with heat and strong acid to give alkenes. Zaitsev’s rule (most substituted alkene) applies to determine the major product. warm CH3 H2SO4 or CH3CH CH CH3H PO 3 OH CH3 CH3C CH CH3 Major product 4 CH3 CH3CH CH CH2 Minor product 13-13 Alcohols: reactions Zaitsev’s rule applied again CH3 OH warm H2SO4 or H3PO4 H may leave from CH3 major product: more substituted alkene 13-14 Alcohols: reactions 2. Oxidation Secondary alcohols oxidize to ketones. (The reaction is also an elimination of 2H.) The usual oxidizing agent is a Cr(VI) species. Tertiary alcohols do not oxidize as there is no H on the carbonyl carbon to remove! OH CrO3, py or O K2Cr2O7 2H eliminated 13-15 Alcohols: reactions Primary alcohols usually oxidize to acids. With some care (Usually CrO3) an aldehyde may be obtained. [O] CrO3, py CH3CH2CH2 OH [O] KMnO4 O CH3CH2CH Easily oxidized to acid O CH3CH2C OH 13-16 13.6 Redox in Living Systems Oxidation-gain of oxygen loss of hydrogen (usually 2) Reduction-loss of oxygen gain of hydrogen (usually 2) More oxidized form H R C H H H H R C OH R C O H More reduced form OH R C O 13-17 Biological Redox-2 Oxidoreductases catalyze biological redox reactions. Coenzymes (organic molecules) are required to donate or accept hydrogen. NAD+ is a common coenzyme. - COO COO H O C H Malate C O CH2 dehydrogenase CH 2 COO COO + NADH + H+13-18 + NAD+ 13.7 Phenols Widely used as health care germicides and as flavors and preservatives. OH CH3 OH OH CH3CH CH3 Thymol (mint) CH3 p-cresol in Lysol HO CH2 5 CH3 hexyl resorcinol in throat lozenges 13-19 13.7 Phenols-2 OH + NaOH ONa + H2O Phenols are acidic but not as acidic as carboxylic acids. They react with NaOH to give salts and water. (Acid/base chapter.) Note: alcohols are not acidic in the context of our class. 13-20 13.8 Ethers Ethers are slightly polar but do not hydrogen bond to one another. Trends in boiling points (Similar MW) CH3CH2CH3 bp -42 oC bp -23 oC CH3O CH3 CH3CH2OH bp +78.5 oC 13-21 Ethers: names Common names for ethers consist of the names of the two groups attached to the O listed in alphabetical order (or size) and followed by ‘ether’. Each part is a separate word. Name: CH3CH2 CH3 O CH3 CH O CH3 Isopropyl methyl ether ethyl phenyl ether13-22 Ethers: names-2 The IUPAC names for ethers are based on the alkane name of the longest chain attached to the O. The shorter chain is named as an alkoxy substituent. (alkane with the ane replaced by oxy, eg. CH3CH2O=ethoxy) Thus CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2-O-CH3 1-methoxypentane 13-23 Ethers: reactions • Chemically ethers are moderately inert • Symmetrical ethers may be prepared by dehydrating two alcohol molecules CH3 CH2OH HO CH2 CH3 H+ (H3PO4) warm CH3 CH2O CH2 CH3 13-24 Ethers: uses Ethers are often used as anesthetics. CH3 CH2O CH2 CH3 Diethyl ether First successful general anesthetic F Cl CH3O C C H penthrane F Cl 13-25 13.9 Thiols: names Named based on longest alkane chain with the suffix thiol position indicated by number. E. g. CH3 CH3 CH CH2 CH2 SH 3-methy-1-butanethiol 13-26 Thiols/Disulfides: reactions COOH I (very mild) 2 H C SH H H2, Pt NH2 LiAlH4 cysteine, an NaBH4 amino acid 2 COOH COOH C CH2 S S CH2C H NH2 NH2 + 2H cystine, important in proteins The thiol-disulfide redox pair is responsible for a critical factor in protein structure called a disulfide bridge. 13-27 The End Alcohols, etc. 13-28