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By Puan Azduwin Khasri 6th NOVEMBER 2012
ALCOHOL By Puan Azduwin Khasri 6th NOVEMBER 2012
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INTRODUCTION
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Reaction of Alcohol Others OXIDATION SUBSTITUTION ELIMINATION
(DEHYDRATION) OXIDATION SUBSTITUTION Others ALKYL HALIDE SULFONATE ESTER KETONE ALDEHIDE CARBOXILIC ACID ALKENE
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Nucleophilic substitution of Alcohol
An alcohol has a strongly base leaving group (HO-) therefore alcohol cannot undergo a nucleophilic substitution reaction Convert the strongly basic leaving group (OH–) into the good leaving group, H2O (a weaker base):
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Primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols all undergo
nucleophilic substitution reactions with HI, HBr, and HCl:
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SN1 REACTION OF ALCOHOL Secondary and tertiary alcohols undergo SN1 reactions with hydrogen halides:
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Look out for rearrangement product in the SN1 reaction of the secondary or tertiary alcohol:
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SN2 REACTION OF ALCOHOL Primary alcohols undergo SN2 reactions with hydrogen halides:
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When HCl is used; SN2 reaction is slower, but the rate can be increased using ZnCl2 as catalyst .
ZnCl2 functions as a Lewis acid that complexes strongly with the lone-pair electrons on oxygen:
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CLASS EXERCISE 1 Give the major product of each of the following reactions:
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Other Methods for Converting Alcohols
into Alkyl Halides Utilization of phosphorus tribromide: PYRIDINE Other phosphorus reagents can be used: PBr3, phosphorus tribromide PCl3, phosphorus trichloride PCl5, phosphorus pentachloride POCl3, phosphorus oxychloride
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Activation by SOCl2 Pyridine is generally used as a solvent and also acts as a base:
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Summary: Converting of Alcohols to Alkyl Halides
Recommended procedures:
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Converting Alcohols into
Sulfonate Esters
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Several sulfonyl chlorides are available to activate OH
groups:
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ELIMINATION REACTION OF ALCOHOL (DEHYDRATION)
Dehydration of alcohol requires acid catalyst and heat Dehydration of Secondary and Tertiary Alcohols by an E1 Pathway 17
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Mechanism of E1 Dehydration of an Alcohol
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The major product is the most stable alkene product:
The most stable alkene product has the most stable transition state
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The rate of dehydration reflects the ease with which the
carbocation is formed:
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Look out for carbocation rearrangement:
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Pinicol Rearrangement
Protonate alcohol: Eliminate water: Rearrange carbocation: Deprotonate: Resonance-stabilized oxocarbocation
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Ring Expansion and Contraction
Mechanism for this reaction: Protonate the alcohol. Eliminate water. Rearrange carbocation to afford the more stable cyclohexane ring. Deprotonate.
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Primary Alcohols Undergo Dehydration by an E2 Pathway
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A Milder Way to Dehydrate an Alcohol
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Oxidation of Alcohols Oxidation by chromic acid:
Secondary alcohols are oxidized to ketones
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Primary alcohols are oxidized to aldehydes and eventually carboxylic acids:
Mechanism:
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The oxidation of aldehydes to acids requires the presence of water:
In the absence of water, the oxidation stops at the aldehyde: PCC, a methylene chloride–soluble reagent: No water present
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A tertiary alcohol cannot be oxidized and is converted to a stable chromate ester instead:
No hydrogen on this carbon Di-tert-Butyl Chromate
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ETHER
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Nucleophilic substitution reaction of Ether
Ethers, like alcohols, can be activated by protonation: Ether can undergo nucleophilic substitution with HBr and HI only (HCl cannot be used because Cl- too poor nucleophile
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Ether cleavage: an SN1 reaction:
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Reagents such as SOCl2 and PCl3 can activate alcohols but not ethers
Ethers are frequently used as solvents because only they react with hydrogen halides
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Nucleophilic Substitution
Reactions of Epoxides Acidic condition; HBr: Aqueous acid:
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Reaction of an epoxide in different substituent
Regioselectivity: Mechanism:
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Neutral or Basic condition:
When a nucleophile attacks an unprotonated epoxide, the reaction is a pure SN2 reaction: Therefore:
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Epoxides Are Synthetically
Useful Reagents Enantiomers
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CLASS EXERCISE 2 Give the major product of the following reactions:
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THE END
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