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Alcohols and Phenols: Based On Mcmurry'S Organic Chemistry, 9 Edition

This document discusses alcohols and phenols. It covers naming, properties, preparation methods including reduction of carbonyls and use of Grignard reagents, and common reactions such as oxidation, protection, and conversion to esters for alcohols. For phenols, reactions include electrophilic aromatic substitution, oxidation to quinones, and important uses are described.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views47 pages

Alcohols and Phenols: Based On Mcmurry'S Organic Chemistry, 9 Edition

This document discusses alcohols and phenols. It covers naming, properties, preparation methods including reduction of carbonyls and use of Grignard reagents, and common reactions such as oxidation, protection, and conversion to esters for alcohols. For phenols, reactions include electrophilic aromatic substitution, oxidation to quinones, and important uses are described.

Uploaded by

劉靖騰
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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17.

Alcohols and Phenols

Based on McMurry’s Organic Chemistry, 9th edition


Learning Objectives
(17.1)
 Naming alcohols and phenols
(17.2)
 Properties of alcohols and phenols
(17.3)
 Preparation of alcohols: A review
(17.4)
 Alcohols from carbonyl compounds:
Reduction
Learning Objectives
(17.5)
 Alcohols from carbonyl compounds: Grignard
reaction
(17.6)
 Reactions of alcohols
(17.7)
 Oxidation of alcohols
(17.8)
 Protection of alcohols
Learning Objectives
(17.9)
 Phenols and their uses
(17.10)
 Reactions of phenols
(17.11)
 Spectroscopy of alcohols and phenols
Alcohols and Phenols
 Organic derivatives of water
 One of water’s hydrogens is replaced by an
organic group
 Alcohols contain an –OH group connected to
a saturated, sp3-hybridized C atom
Alcohols and Phenols
 Important solvents and synthesis
intermediates
 Phenols contain an OH group connected to a
carbon in a benzene ring
 Ethanol, CH3CH2OH, called ethyl alcohol, is a
solvent, fuel, and beverage
 Phenol has diverse uses and gives its name
to the general class of compounds
Naming Alcohols and Phenols
 General classifications of alcohols are based
on number of organic groups bonded to the
hydroxyl-bearing carbon

 IUPAC system names simple alcohols as


derivatives of the parent alkane with a suffix -
ol
Naming Alcohols
 Rule 1
 Select the longest carbon chain containing the
hydroxyl group, and derive the parent name by
replacing the -e ending of the corresponding
alkane with -ol
 Rule 2
 Number the chain from the end nearer the
hydroxyl group
Naming Alcohols
 Rule 3
 Number substituents according to position on
chain, listing the substituents in alphabetical
order
Naming Phenols
 -phenol is used as the parent name
 Not -benzene
 Name substituents on aromatic ring by their
position from –OH
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Structure around O of alcohols or phenols are
similar to that in water, sp3-hybridized
 Attraction of positively polarized –OH
hydrogen atom from one molecule to the lone
pair of electrons on a negatively polarized
oxygen atom of another molecule:
 Produces weak force that holds the molecules
together
 Raises the boiling temperature
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Weakly basic and weakly acidic
 Weak bases, protonated by strong acids yield
oxonium ions, ROH2+
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Weak acids, dissociate slightly in dilute
aqueous solution generating H3O+ and an
alkoxide ion, RO- or phenoxide ion, ArO-
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Strength of an acid in water can be
expressed by an acidity constant, Ka

 Smaller Ka and larger pKa, less acidic


 Larger Ka and smaller pKa, more acidic
 Effect of alkyl substitution on alcohol acidity is
primarily due to solvation of alkoxide ion
formed on acid dissociation
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 The more easily the alkoxide ion is solvated
by water, the more its formation is
energetically favored

 Inductive effects are important in determining


alcohol acidities
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Electron-withdrawing groups make an alcohol
a stronger acid by stabilizing the conjugate
base

 Alcohols react with alkali metals and with


strong bases
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Alkoxides are bases used as reagents in
organic chemistry
Properties of Alcohols and Phenols
 Phenols are more acidic than alcohols due to
resonance stabilization of the phenoxide ion
 Phenols with an electron-withdrawing
substituent are more acidic and phenols with
an electron-donating substituent are less
acidic
Preparation of Alcohols: A Review
 Alcohols are derived from many types of
compounds
 The alcohol hydroxyl can be converted to
many other functional groups
Preparation of Alcohols: A Review
 In the hydroboration of alkenes, indirect
methods used are:
 Hydroboration-oxidation, yielding the syn, non-
Markovnikov hydration product
 Oxymercuration-demercuration yielding
Markovnikov hydration product
Preparation of Alcohols: A Review
 Cis-1,2-diols are prepared from direct
hydroxylation of an alkene with OsO4 followed
by reduction with NaHSO3
 Trans-1,2-diols can be prepared from acid-
catalyzed hydrolysis of epoxides
Alcohols from Carbonyl
Compounds: Reduction
 Reduction of a carbonyl compound gives an
alcohol
 Addition of H to a C═O bond

 Reduction of aldehydes gives primary


alcohols
 Reduction of ketones gives secondary
alcohols
Reduction Reagent: Sodium
Borohydride (NaBH4)
 NaBH4 is not sensitive to moisture and can be
used with either water or alcohol
Mechanism of Reduction
 Addition of a nucleophilic hydride ion to the
positively polarized, electrophilic carbon atom
of the carbonyl group
 Alkoxide ion is protonated to yield the alcohol
product
Reduction of Carboxylic Acids and
Esters
 Carboxylic acids and esters are reduced to
give primary alcohols
 LiAlH4 is used because NaBH4 is not effective
Alcohols from Carbonyl Compounds:
Grignard Reagents
 Organohalides react with magnesium to
produce Grignard reagents, RMgX
 Grignard reagents react with carbonyl
compounds to yield alcohols
Alcohols from Carbonyl Compounds:
Grignard Reagents
Alcohols from Carbonyl Compounds:
Grignard Reagents
 Esters react with Grignard reagents to yield
tertiary alcohols

 Grignard reagents do not give addition


products with carboxylic acids
 Acidic carboxyl hydrogen reacts with the basic
Grignard reagent to yield a hydrocarbon and
the magnesium salt of the acid
Limitations of Grignard Reagents
 If other reactive functional groups are present
in the same molecule, Grignard reagent
cannot be prepared from an organohalide
Mechanism of the Addition of a
Grignard Reagent
 Grignard reagents act as nucleophilic carbon
anions
 Intermediate alkoxide is protonated to
produce the alcohol
Reactions of Alcohols
 Conversion of alcohols into alkyl halides
 3˚ alcohols react with HCl or HBr by SN1
through carbocation intermediate
 1˚ and 2˚ alcohols are converted into halides
by treatment with SOCl2 or PBr3 via SN2
mechanism
Reactions of 1˚ and 2˚ Alcohols
Conversion of Alcohols into
Tosylates
 Reaction of alcohols with p-toluenesulfonyl
chloride in pyridine yields alkyl tosylates,
ROTos
 C–O bond remains intact and configuration at
a chirality center is maintained
 Resulting alkyl tosylates react like alkyl
halides
Stereochemical Uses of Tosylates
 The SN2 reaction of an alcohol via an alkyl
halide proceeds with two inversions, giving a
product with same arrangement as the
starting alcohol
 The SN2 reaction of an alcohol via a tosylate,
produces inversion at the chirality center
Dehydration of Alcohols to Yield
Alkenes
 Tertiary alcohols are dehydrated using acid-
catalyzed reactions
 Follows Zaitsev’s rule and yields a more stable
alkene as the major product
 Reactivity is the result of the nature of the
carbocation intermediate
Dehydration with POCl3
 Direct E2 elimination of water does not occur
because hydroxide ion is a poor leaving
group
Conversion of Alcohols into Esters
 Reaction can be carried out in a single step
with the use of a strong acid as catalyst
 Reactivity of carboxylic acid is increased by
converting it into a carboxylic acid chloride,
which then reacts with the alcohol
Oxidation of Alcohols
 Accomplished by reagents, such as KMnO4,
CrO3, and Na2Cr2O7
Oxidation of Alcohols
 Primary alcohols are oxidized to either
aldehydes or carboxylic acids
 To prepare aldehyde from a primary alcohol,
I(V)-containing Dess–Martin periodinane in
dichloromethane is used
Oxidation of Alcohols
 Secondary alcohols oxidize easily to give
ketones
 Effective with inexpensive reagents such as
Na2Cr2O7 in acetic acid
Oxidation of Alcohols
 Cr(VI) reagent reacts with the alcohol to give
a chromate intermediate followed by
expulsion of a reduced Cr(IV) species
Protection of Alcohols
 Done to overcome incompatibility that might arise
by protecting the interfering functional group

 Involves:
 Introduction of a protecting group to block
interfering function
 Execution of the desired reaction
 Removal of the protecting group
Protection of Alcohols
 Reaction with chlorotrimethylsilane in the
presence of base yields an unreactive
trialkylsilyl ether
Phenols and Their Uses
 Phenols are synthesized using
isopropylbenzene, commonly called cumene
 Process yields two valuable chemicals at the
same time
Reactions of Phenols
 Electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions
 Hydroxyl group is a strongly activating
substituent in electrophilic aromatic
substitution reactions
 Makes phenols substrates for:
 Electrophilic halogenation
 Nitration
 Sulfonation
 Friedel-Crafts reactions
Reactions of Phenols
 Oxidation of phenols
 Oxidation of a phenol yields a 2,5-
cyclohexadiene-1,4-dione, or quinone
 Fremy's salt [(KSO3)2NO] is used in more
complex cases

 Quinones can be easily reduced to


hydroquinones by reagents such as NaBH4
and SnCl2
Reactions of Phenols
 Ubiquinones mediate electron-transfer
processes involved in energy production
 Also called coenzymes Q
 Are components of the cells in all aerobic
organisms

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