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Download Chapter 7 Notes - Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols Functional groups alcohol
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Chapter 7 Notes - Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols Functional groups alcohol: C-O-H ether: C-O-C thiol: C-S-H Alcohol Classification based on the carbon the OH group is attached to: 1° , 2° , 3° methyl alcohol CH3OH ethyl alcohol CH3CH2OH (1°) isopropyl alcohol (CH3)2CHOH (2°) t-butyl alcohol (CH3)3COH (3°) Alcohol Nomenclature OH group takes priority (even over -ene or -yne) - it must be in the parent chain - the direction of numbering gives it the lowest possible number -ol suffix with number designation name other substituents and multiple bonds as usual Alcohol Examples common names for alcohols: alkyl alcohol cyclohexyl alcohol or cyclohexanol trans-4-methylcyclohexanol Alcohol Example (R)-3-methyl-5-hexen-3-ol Ether Nomenclature alkyl alkyl ether (common) benzyl methyl ether alkoxy substituent (IUPAC) (S)-2-ethoxypentane Sulfur Functional Groups thiols: C-S-H group (analogous to alcohols) sulfides: C-S-C group (analogous to ethers) disulfides: C-S-S-C group (analogous to peroxides) similar to oxygen analogs except: better nucleophiles easier to oxidize Hydrogen Bonding sp3 O with two covalent bonds and two lone pairs O lone pairs attract polar H bonds covalent O-H bond strength ~ 100 kcal/mole O...H (H-bond) strength ~ 5 kcal/mole Effects of H-Bonding alcohols have higher boiling points than alkanes (nonpolar) or alkyl halides (polar, but no H-bonds) ethers are polar but have no H-bonds (pentane and diethyl ether both boil at about 35°) H-bonds hold together the strands of DNA ("velcro" effect) Acid-Base Reactions remember analogy with water reactions as bases: H2O + H+ <==> H3O+ ROH + H+ <==> ROH2+ (an oxonium ion) reactions as acids: H2O + B- <==> B-H + OHROH + B- <==> B-H + RO- (an alkoxide ion) Acidity of Alcohols alcohols about as acidic as water MeOH more acidic, EtOH less acidic 3° alcohols much weaker acids pKa values: 3° > 2° > 1° > MeOH 18 , 17, 16, 15.5 (compare H2O: pKa = 15.7) tBuOH + NaOH ---> unfavorable Alkoxide Anions deprotonation of alcohols gives alkoxide anions CH3OH + NaNH2 ---> NH3 + CH3O- Na+ (sodium methoxide) most commonly made by direct reaction with active metals CH3OH + Na ---> 1/2 H2 + CH3O- Na+ (CH3)3COH + K ---> 1/2 H2 + (CH3)3CO-K+ Oxygen Functional Groups alcohols are just the first of the many possible oxygen functional groups oxidation leads to increasing number of bonds to oxygen alkane --> alcohol --> carbonyl --> carboxyl --> CO2 reduction leads to decreasing number of bonds to oxygen CO2 --> carboxyl --> carbonyl --> alcohol --> alkane Synthesis of Alcohols hydration of alkenes follows Markovnikov's Rule 1-hexene --(H+, H2O)--> 2-hexanol reduction of carbonyl and carboxyl compounds reducing agents: sodium borohydride (NaBH4) lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4) Alcohol Redox Reactions reductions to prepare alcohols: aldehydes or ketones plus NaBH4 carboxylic acids or esters plus LiAlH4 oxidations of alcohols: 1° alcohol to aldehyde with PCC 2° alcohol to ketone with CrO3 1° alcohol to carboxylic acid with CrO3 Alcohol Redox Examples Reactions of Alcohols acid/base reactions oxidation reactions elimination (dehydration) substitution (C-O bond cleavage) Substitution Reactions substitution by halogens using HX OH is a poor leaving group but initial protonation creates a good leaving group (H2O) halide substitution (SN1 mechanism) tBuOH + HBr --> tBuOH2+ --> tBu+ --> tBuBr favored by relatively stable carbocation (3°) halide substitution (SN2 mechanism) MeOH + HBr --> MeOH2+ + Br- --> MeBr + H2O concerted displacement of H2O by Br- (unstable carbocation) Dehydration (Elimination) Reactions same start as for substitution initial protonation creates a good leaving group (H2O) carbocation may lose H+ to form an alkene (E1 mechanism) tBuOH + H2SO4 --> tBuOH2+ --> tBu+ --> (CH3)2C=CH2 + H+ favored by relatively stable carbocation (3°), absence of nucleophile, high temperature less-substituted alcohols (unstable carbocations) show concerted loss of H2O and H+ (E2 mechanism) The Zaitsev Rule predicts regiochemistry of alkene formation the major product in an elimination reaction is the more substituted alkene (generally more stable) dehydration of an alcohol forms the more stable (more substituted) alkene Ether Reactions ethers are generally unreactive (make good solvents) react with strong acid (protonated form can undergo SN1 or SN2 substitution) Epoxides cyclic 3-membered ring ethers named as 1,2-epoxyalkane prepared from alkenes with peroxyacids unlike other ethers, these react easily to undergo ring opening Epoxide Reactions acid-catalyzed hydration base-catalyzed hydration product is trans diol (backside attack as in the reaction of bromonium ions)