1 / 47

Carboxylic Acids

Carboxylic Acids. Structure and Bonding. –. ••. ••. R. O. R. O. +. • •. • •. ••. C. C. O. O. • •. • •. • •. • •. H. H. Electron Delocalization. –. –. ••. ••. ••. R. O. R. O. R. O. +. • •. • •. • •. ••. ••. C. C. C. +. O. O. O. • •. • •. • •. • •.

trevet
Download Presentation

Carboxylic Acids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Carboxylic Acids

  2. Structure and Bonding

  3. •• •• R O R O + •• •• •• C C O O •• •• •• •• H H Electron Delocalization

  4. – •• •• •• R O R O R O + •• •• •• •• •• C C C + O O O •• •• •• •• •• H H H Electron Delocalization • stabilizes carbonyl group

  5. Formic acid is planar O H C O 120 pm H 134 pm

  6. Carboxylic Acid Nomenclature

  7. O HCOH O CH3COH O CH3(CH2)16COH NOMENCLATURE • systematic IUPAC names replace "-e" ending of alkane with "oic acid" Systematic Name methanoic acid ethanoic acid octadecanoic acid

  8. O HCOH O CH3COH O CH3(CH2)16COH NOMENCLATURES • common names are based on natural origin rather than structure Systematic Name Common Name methanoic acid formic acid ethanoic acid acetic acid octadecanoic acid stearic acid

  9. O CH3CHCOH O OH CH3(CH2)7 (CH2)7COH C C H H NOMENCLATURE Systematic Name Common Name 2-hydroxypropanoicacid lactic acid (Z)-9-octadecenoicacid oleic acid

  10. Physical Properties

  11. O O H CCH3 H3CC O H O Hydrogen-bonded Dimers • Acetic acid exists as a hydrogen-bonded dimer in the gas phase. The hydroxyl group of each molecule is hydrogen-bonded to the carbonyl oxygen of the other.

  12. Hydrogen-bonded Dimers • Acetic acid exists as a hydrogen-bonded dimer in the gas phase. The hydroxyl group of each molecule is hydrogen-bonded to the carbonyl oxygen of the other.

  13. H O O H H3CC H O H O H Solubility in Water • carboxylic acids are similar to alcohols in respect to their solubility in water • form hydrogen bonds to water

  14. O RC O d+ – •• •• O O •• •• •• RC RC •• – O O •• •• •• •• Greater acidity of carboxylic acids is attributedstabilization of carboxylate ion by inductive effect of carbonyl group – resonance stabilization of carboxylate ion

  15. Dicarboxylic Acids

  16. O O HOC COH O O HOCCH2COH O O HOC(CH2)5COH Dicarboxylic Acids pKa • one carboxyl group acts as an electron-withdrawing group toward the other; effect decreases with increasing separation Oxalic acid 1.2 Malonic acid 2.8 Heptanedioic acid 4.3

  17. Reactions of Carboxylic Acids • Acidity • Reduction • Esterification • Reaction with Thionyl Chloride

  18. Reactions of Carboxylic Acids • a-Halogenation • Decarboxylation • But first we revisit acid-catalyzed esterificationto examine its mechanism. New reactions in this chapter

  19. Acidity of Carboxylic Acids • Most carboxylic acids have a pKa close to 5.

  20. O CH3COH Carboxylic acids are weak acids • but carboxylic acids are far more acidic than alcohols CH3CH2OH Ka = 1.8 x 10-5 pKa = 4.7 Ka = 10-16 pKa = 16

  21. O CH2COH X X Ka pKa H 1.8 x 10-5 4.7 2.5 x 10-3 2.6 F Cl 1.4 x 10-3 2.9 Substituent Effects on Acidity • electronegative substituents increase acidity

  22. Salts of Carboxylic Acids

  23. O O Carboxylic acids are neutralized by strong bases • equilibrium lies far to the right; K is ~ 1011 • as long as the molecular weight of the acid is not too high, sodium and potassium carboxylate salts are soluble in water + + RCOH HO– RCO– H2O strongeracid weakeracid

  24. O O CH3(CH2)16CO Micelles • unbranched carboxylic acids with 12-18 carbonsgive carboxylate salts that form micelles inwater ONa sodium stearate(sodium octadecanoate) – Na+

  25. O Micelles • sodium stearate has a polar end (the carboxylate end) and a nonpolar "tail" • the polar end is "water-loving" or hydrophilic • the nonpolar tail is "water-hating" or hydrophobic • in water, many stearate ions cluster together to form spherical aggregates; carboxylate ions on the outside and nonpolar tails on the inside ONa polar nonpolar

  26. A micelle

  27. O O R2CCOH R2CCOH H X a -Halogenation of Carboxylic Acids • analogous to a-halogenation of aldehydes and ketones • key question: Is enol content of carboxylic acids high enough to permit reaction to occur at reasonable rate? (Answer is NO) + + X2 HX

  28. O O Br2 CH3CH2CH2COH CH3CH2CHCOH P Br (77%) Reactions • a-Halogen can be replaced by nucleophilic substitution

  29. O RCOH O O O CH3COH HOCCH2COH Decarboxylation of Carboxylic Acids Simple carboxylic acids do not decarboxylatereadily. + RH CO2 But malonic acid does. 150°C + CO2

  30. Carboxylic Acid DerivativesNucleophilic Acyl Substitution

  31. O RC X Acyl Halides • name the acyl group and add the word chloride, fluoride, bromide, or iodide as appropriate • acyl chlorides are, by far, the most frequently encountered of the acyl halides

  32. O CH3CCl O H2C CHCH2CCl O F CBr Acyl Halides acetyl chloride 3-butenoyl chloride p-fluorobenzoyl bromide

  33. O O RCOCR' Acid Anhydrides • when both acyl groups are the same, name the acid and add the word anhydride • when the groups are different, list the names of the corresponding acids in alphabetical order and add the word anhydride

  34. O O CH3COCCH3 O O C6H5COCC6H5 O O C6H5COC(CH2)5CH3 Acid Anhydrides acetic anhydride benzoic anhydride benzoicheptanoic anhydride

  35. O O O O CH3COCCH3 O O O O Some anhydrides are industrial chemicals Aceticanhydride Phthalicanhydride Maleicanhydride

  36. O RCOR' Esters • name as alkyl alkanoates • cite the alkyl group attached to oxygen first (R') • name the acyl group second; substitute the suffix -ate for the -ic ending of the corresponding acid

  37. O CH3COCH2CH3 O CH3CH2COCH3 O COCH2CH2Cl Esters ethyl acetate methyl propanoate 2-chloroethylbenzoate

  38. O CH3COCH2CH2CH(CH3)2 Esters are very common natural products • also called "isopentyl acetate" and "isoamyl acetate" • contributes to characteristic odor of bananas 3-methylbutyl acetate

  39. Lactones • Lactones are cyclic esters • Formed by intramolecular esterification in acompound that contains a hydroxyl group anda carboxylic acid function

  40. O O HOCH2CH2CH2COH O Examples • IUPAC nomenclature: replace the -oic acidending of the carboxylic acid by-olide • identify the oxygenated carbon by number + H2O 4-hydroxybutanoic acid 4-butanolide

  41. O O O O Common names a b a • Ring size is designated by Greek letter corresponding to oxygenated carbon • A g lactone has a five-membered ring • A d lactone has a six-membered ring b g g d g-butyrolactone d-valerolactone

  42. O RCNH2 Amides having an NH2 group • identify the corresponding carboxylic acid • replace the -ic acid or -oic acid ending by - amide.

  43. O CH3CNH2 O (CH3)2CHCH2CNH2 O CNH2 Amides having an NH2 group acetamide 3-methylbutanamide benzamide

  44. O O RCNHR' RCNR'2 Amides having substituents on N • name the amide as before • precede the name of the amide with the name of the appropriate group or groups • precede the names of the groups by the letter N- (standing for nitrogen and used as a locant) and

  45. O CH3CNHCH3 O CN(CH2CH3)2 O CH3CH2CH2CNCH(CH3)2 CH3 Amides having substituents on N N-methylacetamide N,N-diethylbenzamide N-isopropyl-N-methylbutanamide

  46. RC N Nitriles • add the suffix -nitrile to the name of the parent hydrocarbon chain (including the triply bonded carbon of CN) • or: replace the -ic acid or -oic acid name of the corresponding carboxylic acid by -onitrile • or: name as an alkyl cyanide (functional class name)

  47. CH3C N C6H5C N CH3CHCH3 C N Nitriles ethanenitrileor: acetonitrileor: methyl cyanide benzonitrile 2-methylpropanenitrileor: isopropyl cyanide

More Related