This document discusses the structures, nomenclature, properties and reactions of alcohols, ethers, and epoxides. It begins by describing their structures, with alcohols containing a hydroxyl group bonded to carbon, ethers having two alkyl groups bonded to oxygen, and epoxides being ethers with the oxygen in a three-membered ring. It then covers IUPAC nomenclature rules for naming these compounds. The document concludes by outlining several reactions of alcohols including dehydration, conversion to alkyl halides, and carbocation rearrangements.
This document discusses the structures, nomenclature, properties and reactions of alcohols, ethers, and epoxides. It begins by describing their structures, with alcohols containing a hydroxyl group bonded to carbon, ethers having two alkyl groups bonded to oxygen, and epoxides being ethers with the oxygen in a three-membered ring. It then covers IUPAC nomenclature rules for naming these compounds. The document concludes by outlining several reactions of alcohols including dehydration, conversion to alkyl halides, and carbocation rearrangements.
Original Description:
explain about mechanism and reaction involving alcohol ether and Expokside.
This document discusses the structures, nomenclature, properties and reactions of alcohols, ethers, and epoxides. It begins by describing their structures, with alcohols containing a hydroxyl group bonded to carbon, ethers having two alkyl groups bonded to oxygen, and epoxides being ethers with the oxygen in a three-membered ring. It then covers IUPAC nomenclature rules for naming these compounds. The document concludes by outlining several reactions of alcohols including dehydration, conversion to alkyl halides, and carbocation rearrangements.
This document discusses the structures, nomenclature, properties and reactions of alcohols, ethers, and epoxides. It begins by describing their structures, with alcohols containing a hydroxyl group bonded to carbon, ethers having two alkyl groups bonded to oxygen, and epoxides being ethers with the oxygen in a three-membered ring. It then covers IUPAC nomenclature rules for naming these compounds. The document concludes by outlining several reactions of alcohols including dehydration, conversion to alkyl halides, and carbocation rearrangements.
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Alcohols, Ethers and Epoxides
Alcohols contain a hydroxy group (OH) bonded to an sp 3
hybridized carbon. IntroductionStructure and Bonding 2 Compounds having a hydroxy group on a sp 2 hybridized carbonenols and phenolsundergo different reactions than alcohols. Ethers have two alkyl groups bonded to an oxygen atom. 3 Epoxides are ethers having the oxygen atom in a three- membered ring. Epoxides are also called oxiranes. The COC bond angle for an epoxide must be 60, a considerable deviation from the tetrahedral bond angle of 109.5. Thus, epoxides have angle strain, making them more reactive than other ethers. 4 The oxygen atom in alcohols, ethers and epoxides is sp 3
hybridized. Alcohols and ethers have a bent shape like that in H 2 O. The bond angle around the O atom in an alcohol or ether is similar to the tetrahedral bond angle of 109.5. Because the O atom is much more electronegative than carbon or hydrogen, the CO and OH bonds are all polar. 5 6 When an OH group is bonded to a ring, the ring is numbered beginning with the OH group. Because the functional group is at C1, the 1 is usually omitted from the name. The ring is then numbered in a clockwise or counterclockwise fashion to give the next substituent the lowest number. Figure 9.2 Examples: Naming cyclic alcohols 7 Common names are often used for simple alcohols. To assign a common name: Name all the carbon atoms of the molecule as a single alkyl group. Add the word alcohol, separating the words with a space. 8 Compounds with two hydroxy groups are called diols or glycols. Compounds with three hydroxy groups are called triols and so forth. 9 Simple ethers are usually assigned common names. To do so: Name both alkyl groups bonded to the oxygen, arrange these names alphabetically, and add the word ether. For symmetrical ethers, name the alkyl group and add the prefix di-. Nomenclature of Ethers 10 More complex ethers are named using the IUPAC system. One alkyl group is named as a hydrocarbon chain, and the other is named as part of a substituent bonded to that chain: Name the simpler alkyl group as an alkoxy substituent by changing the yl ending of the alkyl group to oxy. Name the remaining alkyl group as an alkane, with the alkoxy group as a substituent bonded to this chain. Cyclic ethers have an O atom in the ring. A common example is tetrahydrofuran (THF). 11 Epoxides can be named in three different waysAs epoxyalkanes, oxiranes, or alkene oxides. To name an epoxide as an epoxyalkane, first name the alkane chain or ring to which the O atom is attached, and use the prefix epoxy to name the epoxide as a substituent. Use two numbers to designate the location of the atoms to which the Os are bonded. Nomenclature of Epoxides 12 Epoxides bonded to a chain of carbon atoms can also be named as derivatives of oxirane, the simplest epoxide having two carbons and one oxygen atom in a ring. The oxirane ring is numbered to put the O atom at position one, and the first substituent at position two. No number is used for a substituent in a monosubstituted oxirane. 13 Epoxides are also named as alkene oxides, since they are often prepared by adding an O atom to an alkene. To name an epoxide in this way: Mentally replace the epoxide oxygen with a double bond. Name the alkene. Add the word oxide. 14 Alcohols, ethers and epoxides exhibit dipole-dipole interactions because they have a bent structure with two polar bonds. Alcohols are capable of intermolecular hydrogen bonding. Thus, alcohols are more polar than ethers and epoxides. Physical Properties Steric factors affect hydrogen bonding. 15 16 Preparation of Alcohols, Ethers, and Epoxides Alcohols and ethers are both common products of nucleophilic substitution. The preparation of ethers by the method shown in the last two equations is called the Williamson ether synthesis. 17 In theory, unsymmetrical ethers can be synthesized in two different ways; in practice, one path is usually preferred. 18 An alkoxide salt is needed to make an ether. Alkoxides can be prepared from alcohols by a Brnsted- Lowry acidbase reaction. For example, sodium ethoxide (NaOCH 2 CH 3 ) is prepared by treating ethanol with NaH. NaH is an especially good base for forming alkoxide because the by-product of the reaction, H 2 , is a gas that just bubbles out of the reaction mixture. 19 Organic compounds that contain both a hydroxy group and a halogen atom on adjacent carbons are called halohydrins. In halohydrins, an intramolecular version of the Williamson ether synthesis can occur to form epoxides. 20 Reactions of Alcohols Recall that, unlike alkyl halides in which the halogen atom serves as a good leaving group, the OH group in alcohols is a very poor leaving group. For an alcohol to undergo nucleophilic substitution, OH must be converted into a better leaving group. By using acid, OH can be converted into H 2 O, a good leaving group. 21 Reactions of AlcoholsDehydration Dehydration, like dehydrohalogenation, is a elimination reaction in which the elements of OH and H are removed from the and carbon atoms respectively. Dehydration is typically carried out using H 2 SO 4 and other strong acids, or phosphorus oxychloride (POCl 3 ) in the presence of an amine base. 22 Typical acids used for alcohol dehydration are H 2 SO 4 or p- toluenesulfonic acid (TsOH). More substituted alcohols dehydrate more easily, giving rise to the following order of reactivity. 23 When an alcohol has two or three carbons, dehydration is regioselective and follows the Zaitsev rule. The more substituted alkene is the major product when a mixture of constitutional isomers is possible. 24 Secondary and 3 alcohols react by an E1 mechanism, whereas 1 alcohols react by an E2 mechanism. 25 The E1 dehydration of 2 0 and 3 0 alcohols with acid gives clean elimination products without any by-products formed from an S N 1 reaction. Clean elimination takes place because the reaction mixture contains no good nucleophile to react with the intermediate carbocation, so no competing S N 1 reaction occurs. This makes the E1 dehydration of alcohols much more synthetically useful than the E1 dehydrohalogenation of alkyl halides. 26 Since 1 carbocations are highly unstable, their dehydration cannot occur by an E1 mechanism involving a carbocation intermediate. Therefore, 1 alcohols undergo dehydration following an E2 mechanism. 27 Although entropy favors product formation in dehydration (i.e., one molecule of reactant forms two molecules of product), enthalpy does not, since the bonds broken in the reactant are stronger than the and bonds formed in the products. 28 According to Le Chteliers principle, a system at equilibrium will react to counteract any disturbance to the equilibrium. One consequence of this is that removing a product from a reaction mixture as it is formed drives the equilibrium to the right, forming more product. Thus, the alkene, which usually has a lower boiling point than the starting alcohol, can be removed by distillation as it is formed, thus driving the equilibrium to the right to favor production of more product. 29 Carbocation Rearrangements Often, when carbocations are intermediates, a less stable carbocation will be converted into a more stable carbocation by a shift of a hydrogen or an alkyl group. This is called a rearrangement. Because the migrating group in a 1,2-shift moves with two bonding electrons, the carbon it leaves behind now has only three bonds (six electrons), giving it a net positive (+) charge. 30 31 A 1,2-shift can convert a less stable carbocation into a more stable carbocation. Rearrangements are not unique to dehydration reactions. Rearrangements can occur whenever a carbocation is formed as a reactive intermediate. Consider the example below. 2 Carbocation A rearranges to the more stable 3 carbocation by a 1,2-hydride shift, whereas carbocation B does not rearrange because it is 3 to begin with. 32 Dehydration of Alcohols Using POCl 3 and Pyridine Some organic compounds decompose in the presence of strong acid, so other methods have been developed to convert alcohols to alkenes. A common method uses phosphorus oxychloride (POCl 3 ) and pyridine (an amine base) in place of H 2 SO 4 or TsOH. POCl 3 serves much the same role as a strong acid does in acid-catalyzed dehydration. It converts a poor leaving group (OH) into a good leaving group. Dehydration then proceeds by an E2 mechanism. 33 34 Conversion of Alcohols to Alkyl Halides with HX Substitution reactions do not occur with alcohols unless OH is converted into a good leaving group. The reaction of alcohols with HX (X = Cl, Br, I) is a general method to prepare 1, 2, and 3 alkyl halides. 35 More substituted alcohols usually react more rapidly with HX: This order of reactivity can be rationalized by considering the reaction mechanisms involved. The mechanism depends on the structure of the R group. 36 37 38 The reactivity of hydrogen halides increases with increasing acidity. Because Cl is a poorer nucleophile than Br or I, the reaction of 1 0 alcohols with HCl occurs only when an additional Lewis acid catalyst, usually ZnCl 2 , is added. Complexation of ZnCl 2 with the O atom of the alcohol makes a very good leaving group that facilitates the S N 2 reaction. 39 Knowing the mechanism allows us to predict the stereochemistry of the products when the reaction occurs at a stereogenic center. 40 Conversion of Alcohols to Alkyl Halides with SOCl 2
and PBr 3 Primary and 2 alcohols can be converted to alkyl halides using SOCl 2 and PBr 3 . SOCl 2 (thionyl chloride) converts alcohols into alkyl chlorides. PBr 3 (phosphorus tribromide) converts alcohols into alkyl bromides. Both reagents convert OH into a good leaving group in situthat is, directly in the reaction mixtureas well as provide the nucleophile, either Cl or Br, to displace the leaving group. 41 When a 1 or 2 alcohol is treated with SOCl 2 and pyridine, an alkyl chloride is formed, with HCl and SO 2 as byproducts. The mechanism of this reaction consists of two parts: conversion of the OH group into a better leaving group, and nucleophilic cleavage by Cl via an S N 2 reaction. 42 43 Treatment of a 1 0 or 2 0 alcohol with PBr 3 forms an alkyl halide. The mechanism of this reaction also consists of two parts: conversion of the OH group into a better leaving group, and nucleophilic cleavage by Br via an S N 2 reaction. 44 45 46 TosylateAnother Good Leaving Group
Alcohols can be converted into alkyl tosylates. An alkyl tosylate is composed of two parts: the alkyl group R, derived from an alcohol; and the tosylate (short for p- toluenesulfonate), which is a good leaving group. A tosyl group, CH 3 C 6 H 4 SO 2 , is abbreviated Ts, so an alkyl tosylate becomes ROTs. 47 Alcohols are converted to tosylates by treatment with p- toluenesulfonyl chloride (TsCl) in the presence of pyridine. This process converts a poor leaving group (OH) into a good one (OTs). Tosylate is a good leaving group because its conjugate acid, p-toluenesulfonic acid (CH 3 C 6 H 4 SO 3 H, TsOH) is a strong acid (pK a = -7). 48 (S)-2-Butanol is converted to its tosylate with retention of configuration at the stereogenic center. Thus, the CO bond of the alcohol is not broken when tosylate is formed. 49 Because alkyl tosylates have good leaving groups, they undergo both nucleophilic substitution and elimination, exactly as alkyl halides do. Generally, alkyl tosylates are treated with strong nucleophiles and bases, so the mechanism of substitution is S N 2, and the mechanism of elimination is E2. 50 Because substitution occurs via an S N 2 mechanism, inversion of configuration results when the leaving group is bonded to a stereogenic center. We now have another two-step method to convert an alcohol to a substitution product: reaction of an alcohol with TsCl and pyridine to form a tosylate (step 1), followed by nucleophilic attack on the tosylate (step 2). 51 Step 1, formation of the tosylate, proceeds with retention of configuration at a stereogenic center. Step 2 is an S N 2 reaction, so it proceeds with inversion of configuration because the nucleophile attacks from the backside. Overall there is a net inversion of configuration at a stereogenic center. Example: 52 Figure 9.8 Summary: Nucleophilic substitution and elimination reactions of alcohols 53 Reaction of Ethers with Strong Acid In order for ethers to undergo substitution or elimination reactions, their poor leaving group must first be converted into a good leaving group by reaction with strong acids such as HBr and HI. HBr and HI are strong acids that are also sources of good nucleophiles (Br and I respectively). When ethers react with HBr or HI, both CO bonds are cleaved and two alkyl halides are formed as products. 54 The mechanism of ether cleavage is S N 1 or S N 2, depending on the identity of R. When 2 or 3 alkyl groups are bonded to the ether oxygen, the CO bond is cleaved by an S N 1 mechanism involving a carbocation. With methyl or 1 R groups, the CO bond is cleaved by an S N 2 mechanism. Example: In the reaction of (CH 3 ) 3 COCH 3 with HI, the 3 alkyl group undergoes nucleophilic substitution by an S N 1 mechanism, resulting in the cleavage of one CO bond. The methyl group undergoes nucleophilic substitution by an S N 2 mechanism, resulting in the cleavage of the second CO bond. 55 56 Reactions of Epoxides Recall that epoxides do not contain a good leaving group. Epoxides do contain a strained three-membered ring with two polar bonds. Nucleophilic attack opens the strained three-membered ring, making it a favorable process even with a poor leaving group. 57 The reaction occurs readily with strong nucleophiles and with acids like HZ, where Z is a nucleophilic atom. 58 Virtually all strong nucleophiles open an epoxide ring by a two- step reaction sequence: In step 1, the nucleophile attacks an electron-deficient carbon, thus cleaving the CO bond and relieving the strain of the three- membered ring. In step 2 the alkoxide is protonated with water to generate a neutral product with two functional groups on adjacent atoms. Common nucleophiles that open the epoxide ring include OH, OR, CN, SR and NH 3 . With these strong nucleophiles, the reaction occurs by an S N 2 mechanism. 59 Consider the following real examples: 60 Lets now consider the stereochemical consequences of the reaction of 1,2-epoxycyclohexane with OCH 3 . Nucleophilic attack of OCH 3 occurs from the backside at either CO bond, because both ends are similarly substituted. Since attack at either side occurs with equal probability, an equal amount of the two enantiomers (i.e., a racemic mixture) is formed. 61 Optically inactive starting materials give optically inactive products! 62 Acids HZ that contain a nucleophile Z also open epoxide rings by a two-step sequence. HCl, HBr and HI, as well as H 2 O and ROH in the presence of acid, all open an epoxide ring in this manner. 63 Figure 9.9 Opening of an unsymmetrical epoxide ring with HCI 64 Ring opening of an epoxide with either a strong nucleophile or an acid HZ is regioselective because one constitutional isomer is the major or exclusive product. Note that the site selectivity of these two reactions is exactly opposite.