18 Carboxylic Acids
18 Carboxylic Acids
18 Carboxylic Acids
Chapter 18 2
Nomenclature and Physical Properties
In IUPAC nomenclature, the name of a carboxylic acid is obtained
by changing the -e of the corresponding parent alkane to -oic acid
The carboxyl carbon is assigned position 1 and need not be explicitly numbered
Carboxylic acids can form strong hydrogen bonds with each other
and with water
Carboxylic acids with up to 4 carbons are miscible with water in all proportions
Chapter 18 3
Chapter 18 4
Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
The carboxyl proton of most carboxylic acids has a pKa = 4 - 5
Carboxylic acids are readily deprotonated by sodium hydroxide or sodium
bicarbonate to form carboxylate salts
Carboxylate salts are more water soluble than the corresponding carboxylic acid
Chapter 18 5
Dicarboxylic Acids
Dicarboxylic acids are named as alkanedioic acids in the IUPAC
system
Common names are often used for simple dicarboxylic acids
Chapter 18 6
Esters
The names of esters are derived from the names of the
corresponding carboxylic acid and alcohol from which the ester
would be made
The alcohol portion is named first and has the ending -yl
The carboxylic acid portion follows and its name ends with -ate or -oate
Chapter 18 7
Chapter 18 8
Acid Anhydrides
Most anhydrides are named by dropping the word acid from the
carboxylic acid name and adding the word anhydride
Acid Chlorides
Acid chlorides are named by dropping the -ic acid from the name
of the carboxylic acid and adding -yl chloride
Chapter 18 9
Amides
Amides with no substituents on nitrogen are named by replacing
-ic acid in the name with amide
Groups on the nitrogen are named as substitutents and are given the locants N- or
N,N-
Chapter 18 10
Hydrogen bonding between amides in proteins and peptides is an
important factor in determining their 3-dimensional shape
Nitriles
Acyclic nitriles are named by adding the suffix -nitrile to the
alkane name
The nitrile carbon is assigned position 1
Ethanenitrile is usually called acetonitrile
Chapter 18 11
Spectroscopic Properties of Acyl Compounds
IR Spectra
The carbonyl stretching frequency varies according to the type of carboxylic acid
derivative present
O-H stretching vibrations of the carboxylic acid give a broad band at 2500-3100
cm-1
N-H stretching vibrations of amides appear at 3140-3500 cm-1
Chapter 18 12
1H NMR Spectra
The hydrogens of carboxylic acids and their derivatives appear at 2.0-2.5
The carboxyl group proton appears downfield at 10-12
Chapter 18 13
Preparation of Carboxylic Acids
By Oxidation of Alkanes
By Oxidation of Alkylbenzenes
Chapter 18 14
By Oxidation of the Benzene Ring
Chapter 18 15
Primary alkyl halides can react with cyanide to form nitriles and these can be
hydrolyzed to carboxylic acids
Chapter 18 16
Nucleophilic Addition-Elimination at the Acyl
Carbon
Recall that aldehydes and ketones undergo nucleophilic addition
to the carbon-oxygen double bond
Chapter 18 17
To undergo nucleophilic addition-elimination the acyl compound
must have a good leaving group or a group that can be converted
into a good leaving group
Acid chlorides react with loss of chloride ion
Anhydrides react with loss of a carboxylate ion
Chapter 18 18
Esters, carboxylic acids and amides generally react with loss of
the leaving groups alcohol, water and amine, respectively
These leaving groups are generated by protonation of the acyl compound
Aldehydes and ketones cannot react by this mechanism because
they lack a good leaving group
Chapter 18 19
Relative Reactivity of Acyl Compounds
The relative reactivity of carboxylic acids and their derivatives is
as follows:
Chapter 18 20
Acid Chlorides
Synthesis of Acid Chlorides
Acid chlorides are made from carboxylic acids by reaction with
thionyl chloride, phosphorus trichloride or phosphorus
pentachloride
These reagents work because they turn the hydroxyl group of the carboxylic acid
into an excellent leaving group
Chapter 18 21
Reactions of Acyl Chlorides
Acyl chlorides are the most reactive acyl compounds and can be
used to make any of the other derivatives
Since acyl chlorides are easily made from carboxylic acids they
provide a way to synthesize any acyl compound from a carboxylic
acid
Acyl chlorides react readily with water, but this is not a
synthetically useful reaction
Chapter 18 22
Chapter 18 23
Carboxylic Acid Anhydrides
Synthesis of Carboxylic Acid Anhydrides
Acid chlorides react with carboxylic acids to form mixed or
symmetrical anhydrides
It is necessary to use a base such as pyridine
Chapter 18 24
Cyclic anhydrides with 5- and 6-membered rings can be
synthesized by heating the appropriate diacid
Chapter 18 25
Chapter 18 26
Esters
Synthesis of Esters: Esterification
Acid catalyzed reaction of alcohols and carboxylic acids to form
esters is called Fischer esterification
Fischer esterification is an equilibrium process
Ester formation is favored by use of a large excess of either the alcohol or
carboxylic acid
Ester formation is also favored by removal of water
Chapter 18 27
Esterification with labeled methanol gives a product labeled only
at the oxygen atom bonded to the methyl group
A mechanism consistent with this observation is shown below
Chapter 18 28
The reverse reaction is acid-catalyzed ester hydrolysis
Ester hydrolysis is favored by use of dilute aqueous acid
Chapter 18 29
Esters from Carboxylic Acid Anhydrides
Alcohols react readily with anhydrides to form esters
Chapter 18 30
Base-Promoted Hydrolysis of Esters: Saponification
Reaction of an ester with sodium hydroxide results in the
formation of a sodium carboxylate and an alcohol
Chapter 18 31
Lactones
- or -Hydroxyacids undergo acid catalyzed reaction to give
cyclic esters known as - or -lactones, respectively
Chapter 18 32
Lactones can be hydrolyzed with aqueous base
Acidification of the carboxylate product can lead back to the original lactone if too
much acid is added
Chapter 18 33
Amides
Synthesis of Amides
Amides From Acyl Chlorides
Ammonia, primary or secondary amines react with acid chlorides to form amides
An excess of amine is added to neutralize the HCl formed in the reaction
Carboxylic acids can be converted to amides via the corresponding acid chloride
Chapter 18 34
Amides from Carboxylic Anhydrides
Anhydrides react with 2 equivalents of amine to produce an amide and an
ammonium carboxylate
Chapter 18 35
Amides from Carboxylic Acids and Ammonium Carboxylates
Direct reaction of carboxylic acids and ammonia yields ammonium salts
Some ammonium salts of carboxylic acids can be dehydrated to the amide at high
temperatures
This is generally a poor method of amide synthesis
Chapter 18 36
Dicylohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) is a reagent used to form amides from carboxylic
acids and amines
DCC activates the carbonyl group of a carboxylic acid toward nucleophilic
addition-elimination
Chapter 18 37
Hydrolysis of Amides
Heating an amide in concentrated aqueous acid or base causes
hydrolysis
Hydrolysis of an amide is slower than hydrolysis of an ester
Chapter 18 38
Chapter 18 39
Chapter 18 40
Nitriles from the Dehydration of Amides
A nitrile can be formed by reaction of an amide with phosphorous
pentoxide or boiling acetic anhydride
Hydrolysis of Nitriles
A nitrile is the synthetic equivalent of a carboxylic acid because it
can be converted to a carboxylic acid by hydrolysis
Chapter 18 41
Chapter 18 42
Chapter 18 43
Decarboxylation of Carboxylic Acids
-Keto carboxylic acids and their salts decarboxylate readily when
heated
Some even decarboxylate slowly at room temperature
Chapter 18 44
Carboxylate anions decarboxylate rapidly because they form a
resonance-stabilized enolate
Chapter 18 45