Aldehydes & Ketones: (Alkanals & Alkanones)
Aldehydes & Ketones: (Alkanals & Alkanones)
Aldehydes & Ketones: (Alkanals & Alkanones)
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ALDEHYDES & KETONES (ALKANALS & ALKANONES)
: O: :O: : O:
R C H
Aldehydes & ketones both
R C R' C
ketone
contain the carbonyl group.
aldehyde
carbonyl group
C C C
H3C CH3 H3C CH2CH3 CH3
The alkyl group and the H atom bonded to the carbonyl are not leaving
groups. They are not displaced because hydride (H:-) and alkanides
(R:-) are extremely strong bases.
pKb H:- = -21 and pKb :CH3- = -40! (:CH3- = methide).
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Aldehydes and Ketones are Electrophiles
Aldehydes and ketones are moderately reactive as electrophiles
(electron acceptors) among the carboxylic acid derivatives.
: O:
acid chloride ..
:O:
..
: O: R C .. :
Cl
most
R C ..
O C R acid anhydride
: O: reactive
: O: aldehyde
R C H
R C R ketone
:O:
: O: ester ..
.. R C O
.. R
R C OH
.. carboxylic acid :O:
.. H
amide R C N
H
R C N: :O: least
nitrile
.. _ reactive
carboxylate R C ..:
O
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Basicity of Aldehydes and Ketones
-
Nu:
The - oxygen is a weak base (pKb ca. 21)
: O:
Its non bonded e’s are protonated by strong acids.
+
C
H
H
: O: + : O+ : O: E
+
H HSO4-
R C R R C R C R
R
+
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IUPAC Nomenclature of Aldehydes
O OH O O
CH3CHBrCH2C H CH3CHCH2CH2C H CH2C H
4 3 2 1 5 4 3 2 1 2 1
3-bromobutanal 4-hydroxypentanal 2-phenylethanal
The parent chain must contain the CHO- group, and this group is
numbered as carbon 1 (because it is always at a chain end).
O O
HO CHO
C H C H
benzenecarbaldehyde 3-hydroxycyclopentanecarbaldehyde
cyclohexanecarbaldehyde
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Functional Group Precedence in Nomenclature
Functional Group Name as Suffix Name as Prefix
Principal Groups
Carboxylic Acids -oic acid carboxy
–carboxylic acid
Acid Anhydrides -oic anhydride
-carboxylic anhydride
Esters -oate alkoxycarbonyl
-carboxylate
Acid Halides -oyl halide halocarbonyl
-carbonyl halide
Amides -amide amido
-carboxamide
Nitriles -nitrile cyano
-carbonitrile
Aldehydes -al oxo
-carbaldehyde
Ketones -one oxo
Alcohols -ol hydroxy
Phenols -ol hydroxy
Thiols -thiol mercapto
Amines -amine amino
Imines -imine imino
Alkenes -ene alkenyl
Alkynes -yne alkynyl
Alkanes -ane alkyl
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Common Names of Aldehydes
Dry ice
2. Reduction of acid chlorides,esters, and nitriles. (solid CO2)
sublimes at
: O: –78°C.
..
acid chloride R C
.. :
Cl -78°C : O:
1equiv. Only 1 equivalent
: O: R C H of very cold DIBAH
.. 1 DIBAH is used to avoid
ester R C OR
.. +
aldehyde
2 H3O further reduction of
the aldehyde to an
nitrile R C N: alcohol.
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Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
: O: moderate to : O:
R OH mild oxidation
strong oxidation ..
R C R C OH
H ..
1° alcohol Jones reagent carboxylic acid
CrO3 in N aldehyde
CrO3 in H2SO4
or
PCC in CH2Cl2
1 LiAlH4
+
2 H3O
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Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
Carboxylic acids are difficult to reduce and any reducing agent strong
enough to reduce them, e.g., LiAlH4, will not stop at the aldehyde but
always produces the 1° alcohol.
Several ‘derivatives’ of carboxylic acids can be reduced to aldehydes
under carefully controlled conditions.
Acid chlorides, esters, and nitriles are reduced to aldehydes using
very cold conditions (-78°C) and only 1 equivalent of a mild reducing
agent, ‘diisobutylaluminum hydride’ = DIBAH (usually in toluene).
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Preparation of Aldehydes (2 Methods)
Study the following examples and note which groups are displaced by
the hydride (H:-) from DIBAH.
toluene propanal
O O
1. DIBAH -78ºC
CH3CH2 C H + CH3OH
CH3CH2 C O CH3 +
2. H3O
methyl propanoate
_ CH3CH2C N
O _ NH3
HCl propanenitrile
CH3CH2 C Cl
propanoyl chloride
PCC (CH3 )3 C O
(CH3 )3 C OH
or Jones reagent
4-t-butylcyclohexanone
acetophenone
d) 1-methylcyclohexene 2-methylcyclohexanone
CH3 CH3 CH3
1 BH3, THF +6 +
Cr , H
2 NaOH, H2O2, pH8
OH O
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Preparation of Ketones Problems
Reactivity Reactivity
H +
OH O Cl I O O C N N R3
NH C CH3 COCH3 C CH3
deactivators
activators deactivators
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