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Carbonyl Compounds We have already seen a number of carbonyl compounds O R O O R R H Ketone two R groups R O NH2 Amide one R, one N Aldehyde one R, one H R O R OH O OR R Cl Ester one R, one OR Acid one R, one OH Acid chloride one R, one Cl In this chapter, the focus is on the reactivity of ketones and aldehydes Nomenclature of Ketones and Aldehydes Many of the same IUPAC rules already learned apply With ketones: suffix is –one With aldehydes: suffix is -al In numbering, the carbonyl takes precedence over previous functional groups learned O O HO 2-butanone 4-hydroxy-2-butanone (carbonyl precedence over alcohol) O H propanal (do not need to write 1) Common Names In addition to the IUPAC naming, many ketones and aldehydes have common names O H3C O CH3 acetone O CH3 H3C methyl ethyl ketone (name two alkyl groups) H H formaldehyde The aceto- common name is consistent amongst many compounds O H3C aceto- O H3C O OH acetic acid H3C O ethyl acetate The properties of ketones and aldehydes are dependent on the structure The carbonyl double bond is a result of a π bond between the carbon and oxygen Due to electronegativity of oxygen, this double bond is more polarized than an alkene R C O R O O R R R R The increase in proportion of charged structure in resonance hybrid causes two effects: 1) Carbonyl carbon is more electrophilic (compared to alkene) 2) Oxygen is more nucleophilic (compared to alkene) Can observe differences by looking at electron density maps O H H H H H H Physical properties of ketones and aldehydes Two main physical properties are a direct result of carbonyl functionality: 1) Ketones and aldehydes have a higher boiling point than alkanes of similar mass A result of having a greater charged component in the resonance hybrid (charged structures have a higher boiling point and melting points than uncharged) 2) Ketones and aldehydes have a higher water solubility compared to alkanes O H Due to hydrogen bonding capability of carbonyl oxygen O R R H Synthesis of Ketones and Aldehydes We have already seen many ways to synthesize ketones and aldehydes Other Routes to Ketones and Aldehydes Many carbonyls can be converted to other types of carbonyls (chapter 21 focuses on many of these interconversions) Carboxylic acids can be converted to ketones with organolithium reagents R O H3C OH O Li H3 C R O OH Li H3 C First equivalent of organolithium abstracts hydrogen Second equivalent reacts at carbonyl Upon protonation generate geminal diol Geminal diols equilibrate with ketone OH R O H3C R Acid Chlorides can be Converted to Either Aldehydes or Ketones The carboxylic acid can first be converted to an acid chloride The acid chloride can be reduced to an aldehyde with lithium tri(t-butoxy) hydride Need to use lithium tri(t-butoxy) hydride since it is weaker than LAH (LAH would reduce aldehyde to alcohol) Acid Chloride to Ketone As seen earlier with most carbon based nucleophiles (e.g. Grignard reagents) two equivalents will react with an acid chloride to yield a tertiary alcohol Dialkyl cuprates (Gilman reagent), however, only one equivalent adds to yield a ketone Reactions with Nitriles Cyano groups (also called nitriles) also have an electrophilic carbon The electrophilic carbon will react with Grignard reagents N R-MgBr H3C C N H3 C R Reaction stops at imine anion stage N H3C NH H3O R H3C R O H3 O H3C R Upon work-up, the imine anion is protonate to an imine Under same conditions, the imine is hydrolyzed to the ketone Nitriles to Aldehyde Conversion Nitriles can also be converted to aldehydes using an aluminum hydride The reagent of choice is a diisobutyl aluminum hydride [(i-Bu)2AlH] (called DIBAL) Al H H3 C C N N H3C Al(i-Bu)2 O H3 O H H3C The imine anion is hydrolyzed to the carbonyl in work-up -thus yielding an aldehyde H DIBAL will Also Reduce Ester Groups An ester carbonyl is reduced to an aldehyde using DIBAL O H3C O DIBAL OR H3 C H If LAH was used, the ester is reduced to the alcohol instead O H3C OH LAH OR H3 C H H Dithiane Route to Ketones and Aldehydes A dithiane has two sulfur atoms bonded to a methylene (usually see these compounds in 1,3 ring structure but can have different connectivity) S S H H The methylene hydrogens have a pKa ~32 The two polarizable sulfur atoms make the methylene hydrogens far more acidic -compare to pKa of ~50 for unactivated C-H bond Acidic Hydrogens can be Removed S S BuLi S H H S H The carbon anion can then react with an alkyl halide in a normal SN2 reaction S S H RX S S R H 1) BuLi 2) RX S S R R The process can be repeated to yield either a mono- or dialkyl substituted dithiane Removal of Dithiane Once the substituted dithiane is created, the sulfur can be removed with acidic mercury S S R H H+, HgCl2 H2 O O R H Advantages to this procedure: 1) Either an aldehyde or ketone can be prepared depending upon the number of alkyl substituents on dithiane 2) Any alkyl group can be added as long as an SN2 reaction can result 3) Can make asymmetric ketones depending on type of alkyl groups added Reactions of Ketones and Aldehydes Reactions occur either with strong nucleophiles in basic conditions or with weaker nucleophiles on protonated carbonyls in acidic conditions With strong nucleophiles, the nucleophile reacts with the electrophilic carbon H MgBr H O O H H Protonation of Carbonyl Creates more Electrophilic Carbon Carbonyl carbon is much more electrophilic upon protonation due to resonance O H H H O H H H O H H Protonation thus allows a much weaker nucleophile to react at carbonyl carbon All reactions with carbonyls are occurring through one of these mechanisms (strong nucleophile directly on carbonyl or weak nucleophile on protonated carbonyl) Previously observed reactions with carbonyls: O O CH3MgBr LAH OMgBr OLi H H+ H+ OH OH H Also have seen reactions at protonated carbonyls O O H H O CH3OH H+ H3 C H3C OH OH H3 C OH H3C OH OH OH OH OCH3 H H3 C H3 C OH2 OCH3 O H3 C (Fischer esterification) Methanol, or other weak nucleophiles, do not react readily with carbonyls without protonation H OCH3 OH OCH3 H Reactivity of Ketones Versus Aldehydes O H3 C O CH3 H3 C O H H H Aldehydes in general are more reactive than ketones -aldehyde carbon is more electrophilic due to lack of inductive alkyl stabilization Hydration Reactions A carbonyl can become “hydrated” by reaction with water Occurs in acidic conditions where carbonyl is first protonated O H3 C O H+ CH3 H3C H H2O CH3 HO OH H3C Each step in mechanism is reversible, therefore equilibrium is dependent on concentration of each form Ketone is more stable in carbonyl form Aldehyde has relatively more hydrated form than ketone Formaldehyde has a higher concentration of hydrated form CH3 Wittig Reaction Reaction converts a ketone or aldehyde into an alkene O H3 C (Ph)3P=CH2 CH3 H3C CH3 Merely looking at starting materials and product might cause confusion, but this reaction is another type of nucleophile reacting at electrophilic carbonyl The nucleophile is the phosphorous ylide An ylide is any compound that contains a cation adjacent to an anion Formation of Phosphorous Ylides Typically these ylides can be prepared by reacting triphenylphosphine with alkyl halide Ph Ph P Ph Br (Ph)3P Br Phosphonium salt The methylene adjacent to phosphorous in phosphonium salt is acidic BuLi (Ph)3P (Ph)3P (Ph)3P With strong base therefore the ylide can be obtained The carbanion of the ylide is nucleophilic and will react with the carbonyl O (Ph)3P H3C (Ph)3P CH3 H3 C O CH CH3 3 betaine The betaine structure will form 4-membered ring between positive phosporous and negative oxygen (Ph)3P H3C O CH CH3 3 (Ph)3P O H3 C CH3 CH3 oxyphosphetane The oxyphosphetane is the driving force for this reaction, strong phosphorous-oxygen bonds energetically drive reaction The oxyphosphetane will collapse to form a second phosphorous-oxygen bond CH3 (Ph)3P O H3 C CH3 CH3 H3 C CH3 (Ph)3P O Overall an alkene is formed from the initial carbonyl compound The oxygen of the initial carbonyl forms double bond to phosphorous in phosphine oxide (driving force for reaction) Depending upon the initial phosphonium salt, different alkyl groups can be added to alkene product Cyanohydrin Cyano groups (nitriles) can also add to carbonyls Cyanide reacts in a basic mechanism O H3 C O CH3 CN H3C OH CH3 CN H+ H3 C CH3 CN Caution – do not acidify cyanide solution, it will create hydrogen cyanide CN H+ HCN toxic Hydrolysis of Nitrile An advantage with cyanohydrins is that the nitrile can be hydrolyzed to an acid OH H3C CH3 CN OH H+, H2O H3 C CH3 CO2H Depending upon the conditions used to protonate the alkoxide in the previous step, both reactions can occur in same step One of the easiest methods to create an α-hydroxy acid (analogs of α-amino acids) In nature this reaction is used as a biodefense mechanism The formation of cyanohydrins is reversible OH H CN O H HCN Insects store this cyanohydrin as a defense, if predators eat the insects they ingest the cyanohydrin which can break down to generate HCN The HCN will kill the predator and thus act as a deterrent Imines Carbonyls can also react with primary amines to create imines Reaction occurs under an acid catalyzed mechanism Each step is reversible The imine can therefore be converted to the carbonyl with acidic water (Le Chatelier’s principle) Imines are important for vision H2N (opsin) H H O 11-cis-retinal N (opsin) rhodopsin 11-cis-retinal reacts with a 1˚ amine in the protein opsin in the rod cells of the eye N (opsin) h! H N (opsin) Upon application of light, a cis/trans interconversion occurs which is converted into an electrochemical impulse by affecting the concentration of Ca2+ crossing a cell membrane Other Substituted Amines can React in a Similar Manner O H3 C NH2OH CH3 O H3 C H+ CH3 H+ H3 C H+ CH3 N H3 C H3 C NH2 CH3 N NH2NHPh CH3 OH oximes NH2NH2 O H3 C N hydrazones NHPh CH3 Phenyl hydrazones These condensation products are often used for identification These condensation derivatives with substituted amines are often crystalline solids The melting points of these solids are known Therefore an aldehyde or ketone can be determined by comparing the melting points of its condensation products with known values Before many spectroscopic tools were developed this was the only way to determine structure of unknowns, run reactions and systematically determine products Secondary Amines Condense to form Enamines Similar process to imines (use 2˚ amine instead of 1˚ amine) O H3 C R2NH CH3 H+ HO NR2 H3C CH3 NR2 -H2O H3 C CH2 enamine Forms carbon-carbon double bond after losing water, must lose hydrogen from α-carbon as there are no remaining hydrogens on nitrogen Enamines have different subsequent reactivity than imines (study more in chapter 22) Acetals and Ketals Acetals and ketals are related to hydrates, Instead of geminal dialcohols have geminal ethers O H3 C ROH CH3 H+ RO OR H3C CH3 If geminal ether came from a ketone it is called a ketal, if geminal ether came from an aldehyde it is called an acetal This process is once again an equilibrium process Aldehydes (which are more reactive than ketones) typically favor acetals Cyclic Acetals and Ketals When both alcohols to form an acetal are intramolecular (on same molecule) then a cyclic acetal is formed HO O H3 C H OH H+ O O H3C H Cyclic acetals and ketals are often used because they have a higher equilibrium for the acetal form Entropy favors two molecules condensing to one more than when three molecules condense to one Cyclic Thioacetals Already seen cyclic acetals being used with thiol groups O H HS H SH H+ S H S H The dithiane unit is a cyclic thioacetal that was used for synthesis of longer chain aldehydes and ketones Acetals and Hemiacetals are Common with Sugar Compounds H HO H H OH OH OHC OH OH OH glucose CHO OH H OH OH CH2OH Fischer projection While the open chain forms are often drawn for sugar molecules, in solution they often adopt a closed ring form hemiacetal H OH H O HO HO H H OH H H OH H OH H O HO HO H OH H OH H H O O HO H H acetal The closed ring forms have acetal or hemiacetal ring junctions OH H OH Protecting Groups Protecting groups are extremely important in organic synthesis Acetals are stable under basic conditions, but will revert to aldehyde under acidic Thus acetals can be used as a protecting group for the carbonyl and allow reactions that would not be possible otherwise O Br Mg H OH O BrMg H Cannot form this compound, will react intramolecularly Using acetal, however, the Grignard can be formed HO O Br H OH H+ O Br Mg O H BrMg O O H With no carbonyl present, the Grignard reagent is stable O BrMg O O H OH H3 C CH3 O O H OH H+ Reaction is not possible without acetal protecting group O H Baeyer-Villiger Reaction Allows conversion of ketone to ester O O RCO3H R R R O R Mechanism of oxygen insertion? O O R H R O R O O O R H O R O R O H O O R O R HO R R R O R O O Weak oxygen-oxygen single bond Mechanism is not an insertion, but rather a reaction at carbonyl followed by a migration Migration with Unsymmetrical Carbonyls If the two alkyl components of the ketone are different, which one migrates? O R1 O RCO3H R2 R1 O O R2 or R2 O R1 There is a distinct preference for one group to migrate selectively H > 3˚ alkyl > 2˚ alkyl ~ phenyl > 1˚ alkyl > In general, a hydrogen migrates first, but then a more substituted alkyl group migrates preferentially methyl Examples O RCO3H O More substituted substituent migrates preferentially O O O O RCO3H O H O RCO3H HO Cyclic ester (lactone) Another way to oxidize aldehyde to carboxylic acid Stereospecific Migration Migration occurs with RETENTION of configuration for the migrating group Tollen’s Test Convenient test for the presence of aldehydes Again this test was prevalent before spectroscopic tools became so powerful Whenever an aldehyde is present when silver-ammonia is added, metallic silver results The formation of metallic silver is therefore indicative of an aldehyde present, ketones will not react under these conditions Reduction of Ketones and Aldehydes Have learned many ways to reduce a carbonyl to alcohol Also have seen how to reduce a carbonyl to a methylene The main difference between these two mechanisms is acidic versus basic conditions, both require strong conditions (high temperature) for reaction to occur