Carbonyls
Carbonyls
Carbonyls
Oxidation
Aldehydes can be easily oxidised to carboxylic acids.
H
O O O
H C H [O] C H [O] C O H
H C H H C H H C H
H H H
ethanol (primary alcohol) ethanal (aldehyde)
ethanoic acid (carboxylic acid)
This needs to be distilled off
before further oxidation
K 2Cr2O 7(aq)/H+(aq)
RCHO + [O] RCOOH
Aldehyde reflux Carboxylic Acid
Reduction
NaBH4/water
RCHO + 2[H] RCH2OH
Aldehyde room temperature
Primary alcohol
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H
O O
NaBH4/water
R C R + 2[H] R C R
room temperature
ketones H
secondary alcohol
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Alkenes undergo electrophilic addition, and due to the high electron density round the
carbonyl bond they could be expected to undergo the same. The situation is however
very different.
• Oxygen is electronegative (more so than carbon)
• Pulls electron density away from the carbon so that the bond is polar.
This partial withdrawal of electron density from the carbon exposes it to attack by
negatively charged nucleophiles.
Nucleophiles are often negatively charged (CN-), but sometimes are neutral molecules
with a lone pair of electrons e.g. :NH3.
-
C O C O
Nu
-
Nu
The board specifies that you know the Nucleophilic reaction of hydrogen cyanide
with ketones an aldehydes.
• Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is too toxic to use, so potassium or sodium cyanide
is used with a mixture of sulphuric or hydrochloric acid.
+
R KCN(aq) R O- H +
H (aq) R OH
C O C C
room
H temperature H CN H CN
-
CN
a 2-hydroxynitrile
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Questions
1 Complete the following reaction sequence by identifying compounds A, B,
C and D.
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4 (aq)
reflux
K2Cr2O7 B C
A
H2SO4 (aq)
conc distil
H2SO4
heat CH3CH2OH
Na
Based on ammonia or more specifically hydrazine H2N-NH2 adds across the carbonyl
bond. The addition is immediately followed by loss of water. This addition-
elimination is called a condensation reaction
NH NH2
O 2N NO 2
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NO 2 O 2N
H H H
H
CH3CH2C + N N NO 2 CH3 CH2 C N N NO 2
H
O H + H2O
This is important – the exam board expect you to be able to reproduce this. You do
not have to learn the equation of this reaction – shame as it is not hard!
Distinguishing between carbonyls and other organic compounds is quite easy, simply
add 2,4-DNPH as above. The trick is to distinguish between aldehydes and ketones
themselves.
Is it a
Carbonyl?
Add 2,4-DNPH
Aldehyde or
Ketone?
Tollen’s test Silver Mirror Test – Aldehyde present No result with either Tollen’s or Fehling’s reagent – Ketone present
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Tollens’ Test
Simply put, this uses the reducing power of aldehydes to reduce silver (I) to metallic
silver. This is seen as a silver mirror on the inside of the test tube. Hence the test is
often known as the silver mirror test.
1. Add ammonia carefully to about 3cm3 of silver nitrate in a clean test tube
2. Stop adding drops when the precipitate is just redissolved
3. Careful when adding ammonia – XS is not good!
A positive result = silver mirror. A dirty test tube will give a black or grey ppte.
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