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Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution
Organic Chemistry 4th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice Chapter 17 Carbonyl Compounds I Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Irene Lee Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, OH ©2004, Prentice Hall
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Carbonyl Compounds with Groups that Can Be Replaced by a Nucleophile
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Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acids
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Acyl Halides Acid Anhydrides 3-methylpentanoyl bromide
ethanoyl chloride acetyl chloride 3-methylpentanoyl bromide b-methylvalerylbromide cyclopentanecarbonyl chloride Acid Anhydrides
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Esters
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Salts of Carboxylic Acids
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Cyclic Esters Are Known as Lactones
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Amides
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Amides with Substituent(s) Bonded to the Nitrogen
N-cyclohexylpropanamide N-ethyl-N-methylpentanamide Cyclic Amides Are Known as Lactams a b g d 2-azacyclobutanone b-propiolactam 2-azacyclohexanone d-valerolactam 2-azacyclopentanone g-butyrolactam
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Nitriles ethanenitrile acetonitrile methylcyanide benzenecarbonitrile
benzonitrile phenyl cyanide 5-methylhexanenitrile d-methylcapronitrile isohexyl cyanide propenenitrile acrylonitrile
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Two major resonance contributors in esters,
carboxylic acids, and amides
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Carboxylic acids have relatively high boiling points
because Amides have the highest boiling points
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The reactivity of carbonyl compounds resides in the
polarity of the carbonyl group in a nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction Z– will be expelled if it is a much weaker base than Y– (k–1 >> k2) Y– will be expelled if it is a much weaker base (k2 >> k–1)
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Reaction Coordinate Diagrams for
Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Reactions (a) the Nu– is a weaker base (b) the Nu– is a stronger base (c) the Nu– and the leaving group have similar basicities
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A Molecular Orbital Description of How Carbonyl Compounds React
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All carboxylic acid derivatives react by the same general
mechanism The tetrahedral intermediate eliminates the weakest base
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If the nucleophile is neutral …
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Reactions of Acyl Halides
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Formation of Amides from Acyl Halides
Tertiary amines cannot form amides
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Reactions of Acid Anhydrides
Acid anhydrides do not react with sodium chloride or with sodium bromide
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Reactions of Esters a hydrolysis reaction a transesterification
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an aminolysis reaction
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There are no negatively
charged species in the reaction
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Excess water will force the equilibrium to the right
Alcohols that have low boiling points can be removed by distillation as they are formed
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Acid catalyzes the reaction by …
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Esters with tertiary alkyl groups undergo hydrolysis much
more rapidly than do others
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Hydroxide ion increases the rate of formation of the
tetrahedral intermediate This reaction is not reversible
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Elucidating the reaction mechanism of nucleophilic acyl
substitution
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Fats and Oils Are Triesters of Glycerol
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Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution of Carboxylic Acids
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Carboxylic acids do not undergo nucleophilic acyl
substitution reactions with amines
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Hydrolysis of Amides
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Dehydration of an Amide
Dehydration reagents commonly used are SOCl2, P2O5, or POCl3
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An amide cannot be hydrolyzed without a catalyst
An acid catalyst can make a group a better leaving group
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Hydrolysis of an Imide The Gabriel Synthesis
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Nitriles are harder to hydrolyze than amides
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Designing the Synthesis of Cyclic Compounds
Formation of lactones
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Preparation of a compound with a ketone group attached
to a benzene ring
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Preparation of a cyclic ester
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Activation of Carboxylic Acids
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The goal is to convert the OH group into a better leaving
group such that the acyl chloride can be prepared
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The acyl halide can be used to prepare other carboxylic
acid derivatives
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Activated Carboxylic Acid Derivatives
in Living Organisms
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Dicarboxylic acids readily lose water when heated if they
can form a cyclic anhydride with a five- or a six-membered ring
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