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Carboxylic acids and derivatives

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1 Carboxylic acids and derivatives
Dr. Sheppard CHEM 2412 Summer 2015 Klein (2nd ed.) sections: 21.1, 21.2, 21.6, 21.3, 21.15, 21.4, 21.5, 21.10, 21.7, 21.8, 21.9, 21.11, 21.12, 21.13, 21.14

2 Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives
Found in nature Carboxylic acid derivatives:

3 Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives
Nomenclature Review Physical Properties Acidity of Carboxylic Acids Spectroscopy Preparation of Carboxylic Acids Reactions of Carboxylic Acids Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution

4 I. Nomenclature (Review)
Carboxylic acids Parent chain contains carbon of –CO2H Suffix is “-oic acid” –CO2H is carbon 1 Cyclic molecules with –CO2H substituents –CO2H is bonded to carbon 1 of ring Add “carboxylic acid” to end of ring parent name

5 Examples Structure Name

6 Naming Acid Chlorides Name corresponding carboxylic acid
Change “-ic acid” to “-yl chloride” Examples: Structure Name

7 Naming Acid Anhydrides
If R = R’, name carboxylic acid RCO2H. Replace “acid” with “anhydride” If R ≠ R’, list the two acids alphabetically and add the word “anhydride” Examples: Structure Name

8 Naming Esters Name alkyl group bonded to oxygen (R’)
Name carboxylic acid RCO2H Change “-ic acid” to “-ate” Examples: Structure Name

9 Naming Amides Name corresponding carboxylic acid
Change “-oic acid” to “-amide” Examples: Structure Name

10 Naming Nitriles Two methods
Nitrile carbon is carbon 1 of parent chain. Add “-nitrile” to end of alkane name. Name as carboxylic acid derivative. Replace “-ic acid” with “-onitrile”

11 II. Physical Properties
Carboxylic acids form a hydrogen bond dimer Boiling points Carboxylic acids are very high CA > alcohols > aldehyde/ketones > hydrocarbons Carboxylic acid derivatives are less predictable Generally amides > carboxylic acids > acid halides/esters Tertiary amides < primary and secondary amides no H-bonding in liquid phase (neat)

12 II. Physical Properties
Solubility in water Low MW CAs and CADs are soluble Solubility decrease as MW increases Salts of carboxylic acids are more soluble CADs also react with water (to form carboxylic acids) Odor Esters = sweet or floral Carboxylic acids = unpleasant

13 III. Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
Weak acids (pKa ~ 4-5) Stronger than alcohols because conjugate base is resonance-stabilized

14 III. Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
Conjugate base can be further stabilized if electronegative atom is present Inductive effect Position of en atom affects pKa

15 III. Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
Substituted benzoic acids If Z = electron-donating group, acid is weaker If Z = electron-withdrawing group, acid is stronger

16 IV. Spectroscopy of CAs: IR
Absorption at cm-1 for COOH Absorption at cm-1 for C=O

17 IV. Spectroscopy of CAs: NMR
13C-NMR: 1H-NMR: COOH signal d11-12

18 IV. Spectroscopy of CADs: IR
Absorption at cm-1 for C=O

19 IV. Spectroscopy of CADs: NMR
13C-NMR: Carbonyl carbon slightly upfield from aldehydes and ketones 1H-NMR: H adjacent to C=O around d2, but doesn’t always help you determine functional group Look for OH (CA), NH (amide), or OR (ester)

20 V. Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
Oxidation of primary alcohols and aldehydes (section 13.10)

21 V. Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
Oxidative cleavage of alkenes or alkynes (section 10.9)

22 V. Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
Oxidation of alkylbenzenes We will see this in the aromatic chapters

23 V. Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
Hydrolysis of nitriles Requires aqueous acid and heat

24 V. Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
Carboxylation of Grignard reagents Addition of CO2, followed by H3O+ Mechanism: Example:

25 Show two methods that could be used to make butanoic acid from 1-bromopropane

26 VI. Reactions of Carboxylic Acids
Types of reactions Deprotonation a-Substitution Oxidation? Reduction? Conversion to CADs

27 Reduction Need a strong reducing agent Reduce to primary alcohol LAH
Remember reducing agent chart from alcohol chapter

28 Conversion to CADs Fischer esterification
Carboxylic acid + alcohol → ester + water Needs acid catalyst (H2SO4 or HCl) Reaction is reversible Push to the right with excess alcohol or remove water

29 Conversion to CADs Formation of acid chlorides Reagent = SOCl2
Where have we seen this reagent before?

30 Conversion to CADs Formation of acid anhydrides
Anhydride = without water Apply heat to carboxylic acids to remove water

31 Conversion to CADs Formation of amides
Reaction is difficult with N nucleophile because the N (base) reacts with the carboxylic acid (acid)

32 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Include all of the CA → CAD reactions Also used to make CAs from CADs and convert between CADs Z is leaving group Compare to nucleophilic addition (aldehydes/ketones)

33 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Mechanism Acid or base catalyst typically needed Acid makes electrophile more electrophilic Base makes nucleophile more nucleophilic

34 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Reactivity: Less substituted molecules are more reactive

35 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Reactivity: Molecules with better leaving groups are more reactive Less reactive compounds need heat or catalyst to react and are limited in the number of reactions they will undergo Example: amides only undergo hydrolysis and reduction

36 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Reactivity: More reactive compounds can be converted to less reactive compounds Can an ester be converted into an amide? Can an amide be converted into an ester?

37 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Types of reactions

38 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Types of reactions: Reaction Nucleophile Product Special Notes Hydrolysis H2O Carboxylic acid Alcoholysis ROH Ester Aminolysis NH3 1° amine 2° amine 1° amide 2° amide 3° amide With acid chlorides, 2 eq. of amine are needed: the nucleophile neutralizes HCl byproduct Reduction Hydride from LAH CA → 1° ROH Ester → 1° ROH Anhydride → 1° ROH Acid chloride → 1° ROH Amides → amines Hydride from DIBALH aldehyde Ester only Grignard RMgX 3° alcohol Ester and acid halide only

39 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Summary of reactions: acid halide Also Grignard Anhydride formation:

40 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Summary of reactions: anhydrides Example: commercial preparation of aspirin

41 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Summary of reactions: esters Hydrolysis Alcoholysis Aminolysis Reduction (to 1° alcohols and aldehydes) Grignard Alcoholysis of esters = transesterification

42 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Summary of reactions: amides Hydrolysis Acid or base catalyst Heat Reduction

43 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Summary of reactions: nitriles Hydrolysis Acid or base catalyst Heat Reduction

44 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Complete the chart with the functional group that will form from the following reactions. H2O ROH NH3 LAH Grignard Carboxylic acid Acid halide Acid anhydride Ester Amide Nitrile

45 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Specific reactions: Saponification (soap-making) Hydrolysis of ester in base Irreversible reaction

46 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Condensation polymerization A step-growth reaction Example: polyamide What is a polyester? How could a polyester be synthesized?

47 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Step-growth polymerization Compare Fischer esterification… …to polymerization

48 VII. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Step-growth polymerization Biodegradable polymers

49 What is the order of decreasing activity (most reactive = 1, least reactive = 4) toward nucleophilic acyl substitution for the following carboxylic acid derivatives?

50 Draw the products of these reactions.

51 Synthesis Propose a synthesis for ethyl acetate from ethanol.

52 Provide reagents to complete the reaction scheme

53 Provide reagents for the following reactions:


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