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Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives By: Dr. Shatha Alaqeel Structure Of Carboxylic Acids Carboxylic acids are organic acids contain one or more carboxyl group A carboxyl group is made up of a carbonyl (C=O) group and a hydroxyl (O-H) group It is often written in condensed form as –CO2H or –COOH The general formula of a carboxylic acid is R-COOH or Ar-COOH 2 Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acid General formula: R-COOH or Ar-COOH In the IUPAC: Find the longest continuous carbon chain contains the COOH group to get the root name of the parent hydrocarbon, then replace the ending -e by the suffix –oic acid. Number the chain starting with the carbon of COOH group as C-1 If there are substituents identify their names, positions and list them as prefixes in alphabetical order. O H C O O OH H3C common Formic acid IUPAC Methanoic acid C OH Acetic acid Ethanoic acid C2 H5 C O OH Propionic acid C3H7 C O OH Butyric acid C4H9 C OH Valeric acid Propanoic acid Butanoic acid Pentanoic acid In common : the position of the carbons present on the acid chain, are located by the Greek letters α indicating the carbon atom next to COOH group (C2), β (C3), γ (C4), δ (C5), etc . In IUPAC: The carboxylic carbon is numbered 1. CH3 COOH H3C H3C common: IUPAC: -- Dimethyl butyric acid 2,3-Dimethyl butanoic acid Cyclic compounds containing one or more COOH groups attached to the ring are named by identifying the name of the ring followed by the word carboxylic acid or dicarboxylic acids etc. The carbon atom bearing the carboxylic group is numbered 1 and the substituents are numbered relative to it. HOOC HOOC COOH COOH Cyclopropane Carboxylic acid Cyclobutane Carboxylic acid COOH Cyclopropanecarboxylic acid Cyclopentane Carboxylic acid Cyclohexane Carboxylic acid COOH CH(CH3)2 2-Isopropyl-cyclobutanecarboxylic acid COOH Br Cl 2-Bromo-4-chloro-cyclopentanecarboxylic acid COOH NH2 5 3-Amino-cyclohexanecarboxylic acid Some aromatic compounds have common names accepted by the IUPAC also they Can be named as benzene carboxylic acids COOH COOH OH common Benzoic acid IUPAC Benzene carboxylic acid Salicylic acid 2-Hydroxybenzenecarboxylic acid COOH COOH COOH COOH common Phethalic acid IUPAC Benzene-1,2-dicarboxylic acid Terephtalic acid Benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid Physical Properties OF Carboxylic Acids Solubility Carboxylic acids are polar, they can form hydrogen bonds with water molecules H O H-Bonds H C H O H O R O H Smaller carboxylic acids (1 to 4 carbons) are soluble in water Whereas the solubility of bigger carboxylic acids decrease with size Aromatic acids are insoluble in water Boiling Points The boiling points of carboxylic acids indicate a greater degree than alcohols This is due to carboxylic acids usually exist as dimeric pairs by forming two intramolecular hydrogen bonds in nonpolar media O H3C H C O H O C O Hydrogen bond CH3 Acidity And Acid Strength Carboxylic acids are the most acidic simple organic compounds (they are stronger acids by over ten powers of ten compared to alcohols of comparable weights); also they are more acidic than phenols However, they are weak acids compared to inorganic acids (HCl or H2SO4) Adjacent electron withdrawing substituents near the carboxyl group increase the acidity Whereas electron donating substituents decrease the acidity . HCOOH > CH3COOH > CH3CH2COOH > CH3CH2CH2CH2COOH ( size of R group) Cl3CCOOH > Cl2CHCOOH > ClCH2COOH > CH3COOH > (OCH3)CH2COOH ( number of e.w.g. and e.d. g.) CH3CH2CH2CH(Cl)COOH > CH3CH2CH(Cl)CH2COOH > CH3CH(Cl)CH2CH2COOH > CH2(Cl)CH2CH2CH2COOH ( position of e.w.g. relative to COOH group) COOH COOH > O2N NO2 COOH > NO2 COOH > > COOH 9 Preparation Of Carboxylic acids 1- Oxidation Of Primary Alcohols 2- Oxidation Of Alkyl Benzenes 3- Carbonation Of Grignard Reagents H2O H2O 4- Hydrolysis Of Nitriles Reactions of Carboxylic Acids 1- Salts Formation KOH or NaOH RCOOH - + RCOO K or Na - + NaHCO 3 RCOO Na NH3 RCOO NH 4 - + + H2O + + H2O CO 2 + - COO Na COOH + + NaHCO 3 Sodium Benzoate OH + NaHCO 3 N.R 2- Substitution of hydroxyl group R'OH / H + RCOOR' NH3 RCOOH RCONH 2 SOCl 2 1) PCl 5 RCOCl - 2) R''COO Na + Ester Amide Acid Chloride RCOOCOR" Anhydride Carboxylic Acid Derivatives O R C R Cl OR' Acid Chloride ٌ R C Ester O O O C R C O O C R' N Amide acid anhydride 1-Nomenclature of acid chloride Replacing the –ic acid ending of the parent acid by –yl chloride O O H3C C Cl C Cl Ethanoyl chloride Acetyl chloride Benzoyl chloride 2- Nomenclature of esters The alkyl group (R’) is named first followed by the name of the parent acid with the ending –ate in place –ic acid: O O H3C C OCH 3 C OC 2H5 Ethyl ethanoate Ethyl acetate Methyl benzoate 3- Nomenclature of amide Replacing the ending oic acid of the parent acid’s by amide O C O H3C NH2 C NH2 Ethanamide Acetamide Benzamide O O H C C CH3 N CH3 N,N-Dimethylmethamide N,N-Dimethylformamide CH3 N CH3 N-Ethyl-N-methylbenzamide 4- Nomenclature of anhydride An anhydride is named by replacing the word acid by anhydride. O H3C C O O O C O CH3 Ethanoic anhydride C O O O C Benzoic anhydide Succinic anhydride O Reaction of Esters O R O + + C H H2O R + C OH OR' O R O + + C H R''OH R O + + H NH3 R R 1) LiAlH 4 C 2) H 3O OR' + R CH2 OH + R" O + OR' R'OH NH2 O C + C OR' R R'OH OR" O C + C OR' R R'OH 2 R"MgX 1) Dry ether 2) H 3O + R C R" OH + R'OH R'OH Acid Chlorides: Reactions O H2O R + C HCl OH O R'OH R + C HCl OR' O O R R NH3 Cl HCl NH2 + C + C O NH 2R' R + C HCl NHR' O AlCl 3 R C 1) LiAlH 4 2) H 3O + R CH 2OH + HCl Acid anhydride: Reactions O H2O R + C R'COOH OH O R'OH R + C R'COOH OR' O O R C O C R NH3 O R' R'COOH + C NH2 + O NH 2R' R + C R'COOH NHR' O AlCl 3 R 1) LiAlH 4 2) H 3O + R + C CH 2OH + R'CH 2OH R'COOH Reactions of Amides O R H3O C O + R + C NH2 OH O R O NaOH/ heat C R ONa O 1) LiAlH 4 C NH2 O R NHR' O C NH2 O R 2) H 3O + 1) LiAlH 4 C R + C NH2 R NH3 C NH2 2) H 3O + P 2O 5 R CH2 NH2 R CH2 NHR' R C N - H 2O Br 2 / NaOH or NaOBr R NH2 NH3