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Published byLaurence Edwin Gray Modified over 9 years ago
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Oxidation of Alcohols A Peer-Assisted Learning Demonstration
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Discussion The most important reaction of alcohols is their oxidation to carbonyl compounds. Primary alcohols yield either aldehydes or carboxylic acids, depending on the conditions used. Secondary alcohols yield ketones - and tertiary alcohols do not react under the usual oxidizing conditions. 1-propanol is oxidized rapidly, 2-propanol more slowly. Under the given reaction conditions tert- butanol does not react. Primary and secondary alcohol reduce yellow Cr 2 O 7 2- ions (Cr 6+ ) to blue Cr 3+ ions.
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Mechanism for Oxidation of Alcohols
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1 o Alcohol Oxidations Primary alcohols aldehydes PCC/CH 2 Cl 2 (pyridinium chlorochromate, C 5 H 5 NH + ClCrO 3 - )\ Primary alcohols carboxylic acids Cr VI in one form or another (H 2 CrO 4 or K 2 Cr 2 O 7 ) Mn VII (KMnO 4 /NaOH/H 2 O/heat) Color of reagents can be useful. Cr VI is yellow; Cr III is blue
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2 o Alcohol Oxidations Secondary alcohols ketones Cr VI in one form or another CrO 3 /aqueous acetone = “Jones Reagent” – good oxidizer, doesn’t affect alkenes where KMnO 4 would.
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3 o Alcohol Oxidations Tertiary alcohols cannot be oxidized under normal conditions. Heat them too much in the presence of strong oxidizers; start cleaving C-C bonds.
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Why? When an alcohol is oxidized, a hydrogen is removed from the carbon. If that hydrogen is not present, no oxidation can occur.
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Examples
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