Aldehydes and Ketones
Aldehydes and Ketones
Aldehydes and Ketones
Preparation of Aldehydes —
O
C 5H5 NH CrO 3Cl
RCH 2OH RCH
Preparation of Ketones —
H
K 2C r 2O 7
R1 C OH R1 C O
R2 R2
1
Hydration of an alkyne –
H2SO4, HgSO 4
R1 C C R2
H2O
H H
R1 C C R2 + R1 C C R2
H O O H
2
Friedel-Crafts acylation for aryl ketones –
O O
AlC l3
H + R C Cl C R
3
R1 Nu
Nu:- C O ∅ C O + R1:
-
R2 R2
4
Reactions of Aldehydes and Ketones —
Oxidation —
Aldehydes
O 2 or CrO 3 or K 2Cr2O 7
R C H R C OH
(Ar) or KMnO 4, etc. (Ar)
O O
Tollen's test for aldehydes:
-
+ OH
R C H + Ag(NH3)2 RCO - + Ago
(Ar) (Ar)
O O
5
Nucleophilic Additions —
:Nu- Nu δ−
R R
C O C
R' δ+ δ− R' O δ−
becoming tetrahedral:
sp2 sp3
Nu Nu
R H+ R
C C
R' O R' OH
6
Nucleophilic additions may be acid catalyzed —
R R R
+
C O + H C O H C O H
R' R' R'
More easily attacked by nucleophile
than unprotonated carbonyl.
acid or base
C O + H2O C OH
catalyst
OH
7
The mechanism for this reaction under basic conditions is
as follows –
HO C O HO C O
H O H
HO C O H
+ O H
8
Under acidic conditions the following
mechanism applies –
H O H H O H
H
C O C O H C O H
H
O
H
H
O C O H
H
H
O
H
H H H
O + O C O H
H
9
Acetal Formation —
H H
ROH ROH
C O RO C OH RO C OR + H2O
hemiacetal acetal
10
The mechanism is as follows –
R O H R O H
H
C O C O H C O H
R
O
H
R
O C O H
H
R
O
H
R H R
O + O C O H
H
hemiacetal
11
R O H R O H
H H
R H R R
O C O H O C O H O C O H
H
O
R
R H H
O C O O
R R
R
O C O H H
R O
acetal R
12
Addition of Grignard Reagents —
anhydrous
R-X C2H5OC2H5 R-Mg-X
+ Mg
or Ar-X or or Ar-Mg-X
X = I, Br, Cl O
13
Grignards react with aldehydes and ketones to give
alcohols —
H
H H2O
RMgX + C O H C OH
or ArMgX H3O +
H formaldehyde 1o alcohol
R
R'
R' H2O
+ C O H C OH
H3O + 2o alcohol
H aldehyde R
R'
R' H2O
+ C O + R'' C OH
H3O 3o alcohol
R'' ketone R
H2O
R C O H + Mg(OH)X
14
Synthesize 2-phenyl-2-butanol using a Grignard
synthesis —
15
OH
CH3CH2 C
CH3
O O
H3CC CH3CH2CCH3
+ +
MgBr
CH3CH2MgBr
CH3CH2Br
Br
O
CH3CH2 C + CH3MgBr
16
It is possible to extend the Grignard synthesis to make
quite complex alcohols from simple ones (you don’t win
the Nobel prize for nothing). The basic scheme is as
follows –
alcohol 2 aldehyde
or ketone
17
Formation of Cyanohydrins —
R R
+
+ H3O
C O + K -C N R' C CN
R' OH
18
Addition of Ammonia and Its Derivatives —
C weak acid C
+ R NH2 an imine Oximes, 2,4-DNPs,
catalyst N
O a primary and semicarbazones
amine R are used as
derivatives in
identifying aldehydes
C weak acid C and ketones.
+ NH2OH an oxime
O catalyst N
hydroxyl-
amine OH
O2 N
C weak acid C O 2N
+ NH2NH NO 2
O catalyst N
NH NO 2
a 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone
19