CH 20
CH 20
When a carbonyl carbon also bears a hydroxyl group, then these compounds are appreciably acidic, and are called
carboxylic acids.
O
R C O-H RCO2H RCOOH
Carboxylic acids are classified according to the substituent that is bonded to the carboxyl carbon:
A carboxylic acid donates protons by the heterolytic cleavage of the O-H bond, generating a carboxylate ion.
The carboxyl group takes priority over any other functional groups previously discussed.
E.g.
The chain is numbered starting with the carboxyl group, and a number designates the location of the multiple bond
(and may include Z or E).
E.g.
(Notice that -CO2H as a substituent makes the carbon it is bound to C-1, not itself).
The root name comes from the longest carbon chain containing both carboxyl groups.
E.g.
The carbon is sp2 hybridized, and the O-H bond lies in the plane described by the sp2 carbon, eclipsing the C=O
double bond.
One of the unshared lone pairs of oxygen is delocalized into the electrophilic system of the carbonyl group.
(One of the lone pairs on the hydroxyl oxygen is conjugated with the C=O double bond).
Acidity
Carboxylic acids can dissociate in aqueous solution into carboxylate ions and protons.
The equilibrium constant for this process is Ka, and more frequently we talk in terms of pKa.
The reason why carboxylic acids are much more acidic than alcohols is because the carboxylate anion is much
more stable than the alkoxide anion.
Both alcohols and carboxylic acids are acidic since their respective O-H bonds can be broken heterolytically,
giving a proton and an oxygen anion.
The difference lies in the fact that the carboxylate anion has the negative charge spread out over two oxygen atoms,
whereas the alkoxide has the negative charge localized on a single oxygen atom.
The C and two oxygens are all sp2 hybridized, and the remaining p orbitals create the MO system giving rise to
the half bond between each C and O, and the half negative charge on the end oxygens.
Dicarboxylic Acids
These have two dissociation constants, since they can lose two protons.
Ka1 for the first dissociation, and Ka2 for the second dissociation (which generates a dianion).
Ka2 is always less than Ka1 (the second carboxyl group is less acidic) since it takes extra energy to overcome the
second negative charge being so close to the first negative charge.
Thus electronegative elements can enhance the acid strength, through inductive effects.
E.g.
The closer the substituent to the anion, the more profound the effect.
E.g.
E.g.
These oxidations are best performed using chromic acid (made from Na2Cr2O7 and H2SO4).
Potassium permanganate can be used but gives lower yields.
E.g.
Alkynes also react with conc. KMnO4 to give carboxylic acids, and the same transformation can be achieved by the
use of ozonolysis.
E.g.
The vigorous conditions means this can only be used when there are no oxidizable groups present in the molecule.
E.g.
This results in magnesium salts of carboxylic acids, and treatment with dilute acid produces a carboxylic acid.
The overall transformation is from alkyl halide to a carboxylic acid with an extra carbon atom.
E.g.
E.g.
Nitriles are easily made by the action of cyanide ion as a nucleophile on alkyl halides (or tosylates).
Again the overall transformation is from alkyl halide to a carboxylic acid with an extra carbon atom.
E.g.
Carboxylic acid derivatives differ in the nature of the group bound to the acyl group.
-OH is an acid
-Cl is the acid chloride
-OCOR' is the anhydride
-OR' is the ester
-NR2 is the amide
Nucleophilic acyl substitution can interconvert all of these different acid derivatives.
Under basic conditions, a strong nucleophile can attack the carbonyl carbon, thus generating a tetrahedral
intermediate.
Under acidic conditions, the carbonyl group becomes protonated, and thus activated toward nucleophilic acyl
substitution.
The leaving group (often in its protonated form) is then expelled (often as a neutral molecule). (See next slide).
The overall transformation is that the -OH of an acid is replaced by the -OR' of an alcohol.
E.g.
The carbonyl group of a carboxylic acid is not sufficiently electrophilic to be attacked by the alcohol.
The acid catalyst protonates the carbonyl oxygen, and activates it toward nucleophilic attack.
The alcohol attacks, and after deprotonation of the alcohol oxygen, the hydrate of an ester is formed.
The cation remaining is resonance stabilized, and deprotonation yields the desired ester.
The overall mechanism is quite long, but both steps have been seen before (acid catalyzed addition to a carbonyl;
acid catalyzed dehydration), and so should not be viewed as difficult, or as new work to learn.
To drive the reaction to completion we can either use an excess of one of the reagents, or remove one of the
products.
Often it is the water produced which is removed by a dehydrating agent such as MgSO4, or molecular sieves.
A simpler (yet more expensive) way to make esters in the laboratory (not industrially) is to react an alcohol with an
acid chloride.
Therefore acid chlorides are very reactive with nucleophiles, usually through the nucleophilic acyl substitution
mechanism.
The best way to make acid chlorides is the reaction of a carboxylic acid with either thionyl chloride (SOCl2) or
(COCl)2, which is called oxalyl chloride.
E.g.
Both these methods are good since they generate gaseous by-products, and thus do not contaminate the acid
chloride product.
The lone pair of the acid carbonyl oxygen attacks the electrophilic sulfur (sulfur analogue of an acid chloride), and
chloride is expelled from the tetrahedral intermediate.
This tetrahedral intermediate then expels the leaving group which fragments into SO2 and chloride ion.
Acid chlorides react with alcohols to give esters through a nucleophilic acyl substitution by the addition
elimination mechanism.
The overall transformation of this two step scheme is a carboxylic acid is converted into an acid chloride, then into
an ester.
Ammonia and amines react with acid chlorides to give amides, also through this addition-elimination version of
nucleophilic acyl substitution.
E.g.
E.g.
Diazomethane is a toxic, explosive yellow gas that dissolves in ether, and requires special glassware.
The mechanism involves the deprotonation of the hydroxyl oxygen, which generates a methyldiazonium salt, which
is a potent methylating agent.
The direct reaction of an amine and a carboxylic acid initially forms a carboxylate anion and an ammonium cation.
Normally the reaction would stop at this point since the carboxylate anion is a poor electrophile, but by heating the
reaction to over 100°C, the water can be driven off as steam, and amide products are formed.
E.g.
The reaction proceeds through an aldehyde but it cannot be stopped at that stage since aldehydes are more easily
reduced than carboxylic acids.
This reaction has good selectivity since the carboxyl group reacts faster than any other carbonyl derivative.
Therefore carboxylic acids can be reduced in the presence of ketone functionalities using borane.
Reduction to Aldehydes
(We have seen this before, Ch18). The carboxylic acid must first be converted into a group more easily reduced
than an aldehyde.
The reactive acid derivative is the acid chloride, and the mild reducing agent is lithium aluminum
tri(tbutoxy)hydride.
E.g.
E.g.
The first equivalent just deprotonates the carboxylic acid, and then the second performs a nucleophilic attack to
generate a dianion.
On acid hydrolysis a ketone hydrate is formed, which loses water (H2O) to yield the ketone.
Acid
Factors: (a) Resonance (e.g. RCO2¯ vs. RO¯)
Strength
(b) Electron Withdrawing Groups (Number and Location)