Chapter 13: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Alcohols, Ethers and Thiols
Advertisements

Alcohols & Phenols Dr. Shatha Alaqeel.
Alcohols, Ethers and Thiols Bettelheim, Brown, Campbell and Farrell Chapter 14.
Organic Chemistry II CHEM 271. Chapter One Alcohols, Diols and Thiols.
1 National 5 Chemistry Alcohols. 2 An alcohol contains  A hydroxyl group (—OH) attached to a carbon chain.
Alcohols, Phenols, Thiols, and Ethers Dr. Michael P. Gillespie.
Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers Alcohol and Phenols have –OH group (hydroxyl functionality). Polar. The presence of the hydroxyl group makes them miscible.
Structure and Classification of Alcohols 14.2 Naming Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols 14.3 Some Important Alcohols and Phenols 14.4 Ethers Chapter.
Chapter 12 Organic Chemistry: The Infinite Variety of Carbon Compounds
Chapter 13 Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols
Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols
Alcohols, Phenols, Thiols, and Ethers
Elementary analysis. Mass spectrometer n-hexane.
Alcohol.
Alcohols, Phenols, Thiols, and Ethers
CHEMISTRY 122 Alcohols and Ethers. Alcohols An alcohol is an organic compound that contains the functional group – OH (hydroxyl) They can be organized.
Chemistry 2100 Chapter 14.
Alcohols, phenols, thiols, ethers, and sulfides Vladimíra Kvasnicová.
Ch. 14 Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers Milbank High School.
Chapter 8 Alcohols, Ehters and Thiols. Hydroxyl (OH) functional group Oxygen is sp 3 hybridized.
CHAPTER 13 CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT. ALCOHOL Alcohol –A–A–A–A compound in which an -OH group is connected to an aliphatic carbon atom CH3-CH2-OH ethanol.
Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers
LecturePLUS Timberlake1 Chapter 3 Alcohols, Phenols, Ethers, Thiols.
Chapter 13 Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers Spencer L. Seager Michael R. Slabaugh Jennifer P. Harris.
UNIT 4: Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers
Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols and Chirality
Chapter 14: Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols Alcohol:OH(hydroxyl) group Alcohol: A compound that contains an -OH (hydroxyl) group bonded to a tetrahedral carbon.
Chapter 14 Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols.
Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols
Chapter 5 Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols. Alcohols Alcohol:OH(hydroxyl) group Alcohol: A compound that contains an -OH (hydroxyl) group bonded to a tetrahedral.
© 2003 Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved General, Organic, and Biochemistry, 7e Bettelheim, Brown, and March.
IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS Methanol (wood alcohol): CH 3 OH Production: Useful as a solvent and industrial starting material Highly toxic, if taken internally.
Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols and Chirality
LecturePLUS Timberlake1 Chapter Organic Chemistry: Alcohols, Phenols, Ethers, Aldehydes, and Ketones Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols Ethers Reactions of.
1 Lecture 4 Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols Copyright © 2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings.
Chem 1152: Exam 2 Review Naming Compounds.
13-1 Principles and Applications of Inorganic, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Denniston, Topping, and Caret 4 th ed Chapter 13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill.
General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.1 Chapter 13 Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols 13.1 Alcohols, Phenols, and.
Chapter 13: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers
Chem. 108 Alcohols and Phenols Chapter 7.
1 Chapter 13: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers. 2 ALCOHOLS, PHENOLS, AND ETHERS Hydroxy group – the –OH functional group An alcohol has an –OH group attached.
Chapter 13 Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers Spencer L. Seager Michael R. Slabaugh Jennifer P. Harris.
ALCOHOL, PHENOLS, AND ETHERS. ALCOHOLS Alcohols contain the hydroxyl unit as their functional group (-OH)). The general formula is R-OH, where R = an.
Ch. 7 Alcohols and Phenols BY MAHWASH HAFEEZ. General Formulas and Functional Groups Both of these families contain a hydroxyl group (OH) as functional.
Lecture 11 Monday 2/8/17.
Chapter 1.4 Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols
General, Organic, and Biochemistry, 8e
Lecture 9 Monday 2/6/17.
IDENTIFICATION OF ALCOHOLS
Alcohols and Phenols King Saud University Chemistry Department
Unit 6 – Alcohols and Ethers
Alcohols and Phenols
CHAPTER 1.4 Alcohols, Ethers and Thiols
Alcohols د. جهاد الماليطي.
ORGANIC HALOGEN COMPOUNDS
Alcohols, Ethers and Thiols
Alcohols, Ethers, and Thiols
Alcohols and Phenols
Alcohols (R-OH) In an alcohol, a hydroxyl group
LecturePLUS Timberlake
Alcohols.
Alcohols, Ethers, Phenols, and Thiols
IDENTIFICATION OF ALCOHOLS
10.3 Alcohols These compounds have an -OH attached to the carbon chain. This functional group is called a hydroxyl group. Note: The oxygen is bonded to.
LecturePLUS Timberlake
Structures of Alcohols, Phenols, Thiols and Ethers
Alcohols, Phenols, and Thiols
Alcohols and Phenols
Chapter 12 Alcohols, Phenols, Ethers, Aldehydes, and Ketones
Florida State College at Jacksonville
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 13: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers

ALCOHOLS, PHENOLS, AND ETHERS Hydroxy group – the –OH functional group An alcohol has an –OH group attached to an aliphatic carbon. General formula: R-OH A phenol has an –OH group on a benzene ring. An ether has the functional group: General formula: R-O-R’

NAMING ALCOHOLS Step 1: Name the longest chain to which the –OH group is attached. Use the hydrocarbon name of the chain, drop the final –e, and replace it with –ol. Step 2: Number the longest chain to give the lowest number to the carbon with the attached –OH. Step 3: Locate the –OH position. Example: OH | CH3—CH2—CH2—CH—CH2—CH3 6 5 4 3 2 1 3-hexanol

Step 4: Locate and name any other groups attached to the longest chain. Step 5: Combine the name and location of other groups, the location of the –OH, and the longest chain into the final name. Example: Note: Alcohols containing two –OH groups are diols, three –OH groups are triols. The IUPAC names for these compounds have endings of –diol and –triol rather than –ol. CH3—CH2—CH—CH—CH—CH3 6 5 4 3 2 1 OH | 2,4-dimethyl-3-hexanol CH3 Click here to play Coached Problem Click here to play Coached Problem

NAMING PHENOLS Substituted phenols are usually named as derivatives of the parent compound phenol. Examples:

CLASSIFICATION OF ALCOHOLS Click here to play Coached Problem

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS The –OH group is polar and capable of hydrogen bonding. This makes low molecular weight alcohols highly soluble in water. Hydrogen bonding in a water-methanol solution:

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont. Larger alkanes have greater hydrophobic regions and are less soluble or insoluble in water. Water interacts only with the –OH group of 1-heptanol:

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont.

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont. The –OH group can hydrogen bond between alcohol molecules leading to relatively high boiling points. Hydrogen bonding in pure ethanol:

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont. Click here to play Coached Problem

ALCOHOL REACTIONS The removal of water (dehydration) from an alcohol at 180°C is an elimination reaction that produces an alkene.

ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Under slightly different conditions (140°C), a dehydration reaction can occur between two alcohol molecules to produce an ether.

ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Oxidation – the removal of hydrogen atoms. Alcohol oxidations with an oxidizing (O) agent, such as K2Cr2O7 and KMnO4: Primary alcohols  aldehyde  carboxylic acid Secondary alcohols  ketone Tertiary alcohols  no reaction

Click here to play Coached Problem ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Primary alcohol oxidation Secondary alcohol oxidation Click here to play Coached Problem

IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS • Methanol (wood alcohol): CH3OH • Production: •Useful as a solvent and industrial starting material • Highly toxic, if taken internally causes blindness and/or death

IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS, cont. Ethanol (ethyl alcohol, grain alcohol): CH3CH2OH Produced commercially from ethylene and through biological (yeast) fermentation of carbohydrates Useful as a solvent, industrial starting material, fuel (gasohol), and found in alcoholic beverages. Moderately toxic

IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS, cont. 2-propanol (isopropyl alcohol) is the main component of rubbing alcohol 1,2,3-propanetriol (glycerol) is used as a food moistening agent (nontoxic) and for its soothing qualities (soaps)

IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS, cont. Antifreezes 1,2-ethanediol (ethylene glycol) 1,2-propanediol (propylene glycol)

PHENOLS Phenol behaves as a weak acid in water and can react with bases to form salt.

USES OF PHENOLS: In a dilute solution, phenol is used as a disinfectant. Phenol derivatives used as disinfectants:

USES OF PHENOLS: Phenol derivatives used as antioxidants in food:

Click here to play Coached Problem NAMING ETHERS IUPAC name: Name the smaller of the two R groups as an alkoxy group attached to the parent chain by replacing the –yl ending of the R group with –oxy. Common name: Name the groups attached to the oxygen alphabetically and add the word ether. common: sec-butyl ethyl ether Click here to play Coached Problem

CYCLIC ETHERS Heterocyclic rings contain atoms other than carbon in the ring.

PROPERTIES OF ETHERS Much less polar than alcohols More soluble in water than alkanes, but less soluble than alcohols Low boiling and melting points because of the inability to hydrogen bond between molecules inert and do not react with most reagents (like alkanes) highly flammable (like alkanes)

Hydrogen bonding of dimethyl ether: (a) with water and (b) no hydrogen bonding in the pure state:

THIOLS: THE –SH (SULFHYDRYL) GROUP Most distinguishing characteristic is their strong and offensive odor ethanethiol – added to natural gas 1-propanethiol – odor in garlic and onions trans-2-butene-1-thiol – odor associated with skunks

THIOL REACTIONS Oxidation forms disulfide (-S-S-) linkages, which are important structural features of some proteins:

THIOL REACTIONS, cont. Oxidation reactions can be reversed with a reducing agent (H):

THIOL REACTIONS, cont. Reacts with heavy metals (Pb2+, Hg2+) to form insoluble compounds, with adverse biological results:

POLYFUNCTIONAL COMPOUNDS Compounds with two or more functional groups Functional groups determine chemical properties of compounds. Example: