Chapter 21
Chapter 21
Chapter 21
Carboxylic Compounds
Acyl group bonded to X, an electronegative atom or
leaving group Includes: X = halide (acid halides), acyloxy (anhydrides), alkoxy (esters), amine (amides), thiolate (thioesters), phosphate (acyl phosphates)
molecules. A study of them and their primary reaction nucleophilic acyl substitution is fundamental to understanding organic chemistry
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on the related carboxylic acid (see p 786) Unsymmetrical anhydrides cite the two acids alphabetically
-ic acid with -amide, or by replacing the -carboxylic acid ending with carboxamide If the N is further substituted, identify the substituent groups (preceded by N) and then the parent amide
(RCOOH), with the -ic acid ending replaced by -ate Thioesters, RCOSR (p787) and Acyl Phosphates RCO2PO3 2 See Table 21.1 (p 788)
derivatives have an acyl carbon bonded to a group Y that can leave A tetrahedral intermediate is formed and the leaving group is expelled to generate a new carbonyl compound, leading to substitution
more readily with unhindered carbonyl groups More electrophilic carbonyl groups are more reactive to addition (acyl halides are most reactive, amides are least) The intermediate with the best leaving group decomposes fastest
converted into a less reactive one, but not vice versa. Reactions in the opposite sense are possible but require more complex approaches
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carboxylic acid to yield alcohols esters ammonia or an amine an amide hydride source an aldehyde or an alcohol Grignard reagent a ketone or an alcohol
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carboxylic acid is difficult because OH is a poor leaving group. Convert OH into a better leaving group by using a strong acid catalyst Acid chlorides, anhydrides, esters, and amides can all be prepared from carboxylic acids.
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Fischer Esterification
Method 2: Heating a carboxylic acid in an alcohol
solvent containing a small amount of strong acid produces an ester from the alcohol and acid
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substitution of a carboxylic acid (see p 796) When 18O-labeled methanol reacts with benzoic acid, the methyl benzoate produced is 18O-labeled but the water produced is unlabeled (see p 797)
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reaction with SOCl2 Reaction of a carboxylic acid with PBr3 yields the acid bromide
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acids HCl is generated during the hydrolysis: a base such as pyridine or NaOH is added to remove the HCl
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with alcohols in the presence of pyridine or NaOH. This is called Alcoholysis The reaction is better with less steric bulk
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NH3, primary (RNH2) and secondary amines (R2NH) The reaction with tertiary amines (R3N) gives an unstable species that cannot be isolated HCl is neutralized by the amine or an added base
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tertiary alcohols in which two of the substituents are the same alcohols are obtained, not ketones!!
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diorganocopper (Gilman) reagent, Li+ R2Cu Ketones can be obtained. Addition produces an acyl diorganocopper intermediate, followed by loss of RCu and formation of the ketone
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Acetylation
Acetic anhydride forms acetate esters from
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odors of fruits and flowers Also present in fats and vegetable oils
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Preparation of Esters
Esters are usually prepared from carboxylic acids
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Reactions of Esters
In nucleophilic acyl substitution, esters are
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Fig. 21.7) or aqueous acid (see p 811, Fig. 21.8) to yield a carboxylic acid plus an alcohol
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Aminolysis of Esters
Ammonia reacts with esters to form amides
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elimination of alkoxide ion to yield an aldehyde Reduction of the aldehyde gives the primary alcohol
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organismsproteins, nucleic acids, and other pharmaceuticals have amid functional groups
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Preparation of Amides
Prepared by reaction of an acid chloride with
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produces a carboxylic acid and amine Acidic hydrolysis by nucleophilic addition of water to the protonated amide, followed by loss of ammonia
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Mechanism of Reduction
Addition of hydride to carbonyl group
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21.8 Chemistry of Thioesters and Acyl Phosphates: Biological Carboxylic Acid Derivatives
Nucleophilic carboxyl
substitution in nature often involves a thioester or acyl phosphate Acetyl CoAs are most common thioesters in nature
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reactions Reaction of a diamine and a diacid chloride (or a diacid) gives a polyamide A diol with a diacid leads to a polyester See Table 21.2 (p819); Some Common Step-Growth Polymers
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Polyamides (Nylons)
Heating a diamine with a diacid produces a
polyamide called Nylon Nylon 66 is from adipic acid and hexamethylenediamine at 280C
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Polyesters
The polyester from dimethyl terephthalate and
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Acid chlorides absorb near 1800 cm1 Acid anhydrides absorb at 1820 cm1 and also at 1760 cm1 Esters absorb at 1735 cm1, higher than aldehydes or ketones Amides absorb near the low end of the carbonyl region; near 1650-1690 cm1 See Table 21.3 (p 822): IR Absorption of Some Carbonyl Compounds
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in the 1H NMR spectrum. All acid derivatives absorb in the same range so NMR does not distinguish them from each other
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13C
13C
NMR
NMR is useful for determining the presence or absence of a carbonyl group in a molecule of unknown structure Carbonyl carbon atoms of the various acid derivatives absorb from 160 to 180
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