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1 Chapter 13: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers
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2 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’
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3 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: CH 3 —CH 2 —CH 2 —CH—CH 2 —CH 3 6 5 4 3 2 1 OH | 3-hexanol
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4 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. CH 3 —CH 2 —CH—CH—CH—CH 3 6 5 4 3 2 1 OH | 2,4-dimethyl-3-hexanol CH 3 | CH 3 | Click here to play Coached Problem Click here to play Coached Problem
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5 NAMING PHENOLS Substituted phenols are usually named as derivatives of the parent compound phenol. Examples:
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6 CLASSIFICATION OF ALCOHOLS Click here to play Coached Problem
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7 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:
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8 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:
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9 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont.
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10 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:
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11 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF ALCOHOLS, cont. Click here to play Coached Problem
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12 ALCOHOL REACTIONS The removal of water (dehydration) from an alcohol at 180 ° C is an elimination reaction that produces an alkene.
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13 ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Under slightly different conditions (140 °C), a dehydration reaction can occur between two alcohol molecules to produce an ether.
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14 ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Oxidation – the removal of hydrogen atoms. Alcohol oxidations with an oxidizing (O) agent, such as K 2 Cr 2 O 7 and KMnO 4 : Primary alcohols aldehyde carboxylic acid Secondary alcohols ketone Tertiary alcohols no reaction
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15 ALCOHOL REACTIONS, cont. Primary alcohol oxidation Secondary alcohol oxidation Click here to play Coached Problem
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16 IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS Methanol (wood alcohol): CH 3 OH Production: Useful as a solvent and industrial starting material Highly toxic, if taken internally causes blindness and/or death
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17 IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS, cont. Ethanol (ethyl alcohol, grain alcohol): CH 3 CH 2 OH 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
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18 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)
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19 IMPORTANT ALCOHOLS, cont. Antifreezes 1,2-ethanediol (ethylene glycol) 1,2-propanediol (propylene glycol)
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20 PHENOLS Phenol behaves as a weak acid in water and can react with bases to form salt.
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21 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)
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22 Hydrogen bonding of dimethyl ether: (a) with water and (b) no hydrogen bonding in the pure state:
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