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Chapter 18: Ketones and Aldehydes
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Classes of Carbonyl Compounds
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Carbonyl C=O bond is shorter, stronger and more polar than C=C bond in alkenes
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Nomenclature: Ketone Number chain so the carbonyl carbon has the lowest number Replace “e” with “one”
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Nomenclature: Cyclic Ketone Carbonyl carbon is #1
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Nomenclature: Aldehydes Carbonyl carbon is #1 Replace “e” with “al” If aldehyde is attached to ring, suffix “carbaldehyde” is used
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Nomenclature With higher-priority functional groups, ketone is “oxo” and an aldehyde is a “formyl” group Aldehydes have higher priority than ketones
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Nomenclature- Common Names: Ketones Name alkyl groups attached to carbonyl Use lower case Greek letters instead of numbers
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Nomenclature
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Boiling Points Ketones and aldehydes are more polar. Have higher boiling point that comparable alkanes or ethers
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Solubility: Ketones and Aldehydes Good solvent for alcohols Acetone and acetaldehyde are miscible in water
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Formaldehyde Gas at room temperature
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IR Spectroscopy Strong C=O stretch around 1710 cm -1 (ketones) or 1725 cm -1 (simple aldehydes) C-H stretches for aldehydes: 2710 and 2810 cm -1
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IR Spectroscopy Conjugation lowers carbonyl frequencies to about 1685 cm -1 Rings with ring strain have higher C=O frequencies
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Proton NMR Spectra Aldehyde protons normally around δ9-10 Alpha carbon around δ2.1-2.4
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Carbon NMR Spectra
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Mass Spectrometry (MS)
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McLafferty Rearrangement Net result: breaking of the bond and transfer of a proton from the carbon to oxygen
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Ultraviolet Spectra of Conjugated Carbonyls Have characteristic absorption in UV spectrum Additional conjugate C=C increases max about 30 nm, additional alkyl groups increase about 10nm
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Carbonyl Electronic Transitions
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Industrial Uses Acetone and methyl ethyl ketone are common solvents Formaldehyde is used in polymers like Bakelite and other polymeric products Used as flavorings and additives for food
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Industrial Uses
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones The alcohol product of a Grignard reaction can be oxidized to a carbonyl
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC) or a Swern oxidation takes primary alcohols to aldehydes
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Alkenes can be oxidatively cleaved by ozone, followed by reduction
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Friedel-Crafts Acylation
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Hydration of Alkynes Involves a keto-enol tautomerization Mixture of ketones seen with internal alkynes
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Hydroboration-oxidation of alkyne Anti-Markovnikov addition
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Synthesis Problem
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Organolithium + carboxylic acid ketone (after dehydration)
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Grignard or organolithium reagent + nitrile ketone (after hydrolysis)
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Reduction of nitriles with aluminum hydrides will afford aldehydes
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Mild reducing agent lithium aluminum tri(t- butoxy)hydride with acid chlorides
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Synthesis of Aldehydes and Ketones Organocuprate (Gilman reagent) + acid chloride ketone
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Nucleophilic Addition Aldehydes are more reactive than ketones
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Wittig Reaction Converts the carbonyl group into a new C=C bond Phosphorus ylide is used as the nucleophile
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Wittig Reaction Phosphorus ylides are prepared from triphenylphosphine and an unhindered alkyl halide Butyllithium then abstracts a hydrogen from the carbon attached to phosphorus
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Wittig Reaction- Mechanism Betaine formation Oxaphosphetane formation
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Wittig Reaction- Mechanism Oxaphosphetane collapse
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How would you synthesize the following molecule using a Wittig Reaction
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Hydration of Ketones and Aldehydes In aqueous solution, a ketone or aldehyde is in equilibrium with it’s hydrate Ketones: equilibrium favors keto form
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Hydration of Ketones and Aldehydes Acid-Catalyzed
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Hydration of Ketones and Aldehydes Base-Catalyzed
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Cyanohydrin Formation Base-catalyzed nucleophilic addition HCN is highly toxic
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Formation of Imines Imines are nitrogen analogues of ketones and aldehydes Optimum pH is around 4.5
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Formation of Imines- Mechanism
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Condensations with Amines
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Acetal Formation
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Hemiacetal Formation- Mechanism Must be acid-catalyzed
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Acetal Formation- Mechanism Must be acid-catalyzed
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Hydrolysis of Acetals Acetals can be hydrolyzed by addition of dilute acid Excess of water drives equilibrium towards carbonyl formation
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Cyclic Acetals Addition of diol produces cyclic acetal Reaction is reversible Used as a protecting group Stable in base, hydrolyze in acid
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Cyclic Acetals- Protecting Group Acetals are stable in base, only ketone reduces Hydrolysis conditions protonate the alkoxide and restore the aldehyde
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Oxidation of Aldehydes Easily oxidized to carboxylic acids
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Tollens Test Involves a solution of silver-ammonia complex to the unknown compound If an aldehyde is present, its oxidation reduces silver ion to metallic silver
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Reducing Reagents- Sodium Borohydride NaBH 4 can reduce ketones and aldehydes, not esters, carboxylic acids, acyl chlorides, or amides
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Reducing Reagents- Lithium Aluminum Hydride LiAlH 4 can reduce any carbonyl
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Reducing Reagents- Catalytic Hydrogenation Widely used in industry Raney nickel is finely divided Ni powder saturated with hydrogen gas Will attack alkene first, then carbonyl
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Deoxygenation of Ketones and Aldehydes Clemmensen reduction or Wolff-Kishner reactions can deoxygenate ketones and aldehydes
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Clemmensen Reduction Uses Zinc-Mercury amalgam in aqueous HCl
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Wolff-Kishner Reduction Forms hydrazone, then needs heat with strong base like KOH or potassium tert-butoxide Use high-boiling solvent (ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol, or DMSO)
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