Chapter 2 - Carboxylic Acid - Latest

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SKO3033

ORGANIC CHEMISTRY II

CHAPTER 2
CARBOXYLIC
ACIDS &
DERIVATIVES
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NOMENCLATURE
 Carboxylic acids are strong organic acids which contain the
carboxyl group (-COOH, -CO2H) O
C
O H
 Carboxylic acids are classified as aliphatic or aromatic depending
on whether R or an Ar is attached to the carboxylic group
R-COOH or Ar-COOH

Formula IUPAC Common


alkan -oic acid prefix – ic acid
HCOOH methanoic acid formic acid
CH3COOH ethanoic acid acetic acid
CH3CH2COOH propanoic acid propionic acid
CH3CH2CH2COOH butanoic acid butyric acid
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Naming Rules
• Identify longest chain
• (IUPAC) Number carboxyl carbon as 1
• (Common) Assign , , ,  to carbon atoms
adjacent to carboxyl carbon

Examples:

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Naming Cyclic Carboxylic Acids
 Cyclic compounds containing one or more COOH groups attached
to the ring are named by identifying the name of the ring followed
by the word carboxylic acid or dicarboxylic acids etc.

1,4-cyclohexanedioic acid
cyclopropanoic acid cyclopentanoic acid

 The carbon atom bearing the carboxylic group is numbered 1


and the substituents are numbered relative to it.

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 The simplest aromatic carboxylic acid is benzoic acid.
 Substituted benzoic acids are named with benzoic acid as
the parent name.
 Derivatives are named using numbers to show the location
of substituents relative to the carboxyl group.
 The ring carbon attached to the carboxyl group is the #1 position.

Benzoic acid Salicylic acid


Benzene carboxylic acid 2-Hydroxybenzoic acid

4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoic acid
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1,2-dicarboxylic acid

Phthalic acid
Benzene-1,2-dicarboxylic isophthalic acid
acid Benzene-1,3-dicarboxylic acid

Terephthalic acid
Benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid

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PROPERTIES
1. Solubility

 The carboxylic acid are highly polar organic compounds.


 This polarity results from the presence of a strongly polarized
carbonyl (C=O) group and hydroxyl (O-H) group.

 As the number of carbons in a carboxylic acid series becomes greater,


the solubility in water decreases.
 Aromatic carboxylic acids are insoluble in water.

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2. Boiling Point

Carboxylic acids are polar compounds and form very strong


intermolecular hydrogen bonds to form a dimer.

As the number of carbons in a carboxylic acid series becomes greater, the


boiling point increases.

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Acidity and Acid Strength

 The most important chemical property of carboxylic acids chemistry


is their acidic nature.
 The mineral acids (HCl, HBr, HI, H2SO4, H3PO4 ) are defined as "strong
acids" because they undergo complete dissociation.
 Carboxylic acids are strong organic acids , they are much more acidic
than alcohols.
 Carboxylic acids are stronger acids than phenols.

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SYNTHESIS

1. OXIDATION:

A) Oxidation of primary alcohols and aldehydes

KMnO4/ H+ / Δ KMnO4/ H+ / Δ

K2Cr2O4 / H+ K2Cr2O4 / H+
B) Oxidation of Alkylbenzene

KMnO4 / OH-

Δ / H+

KMnO4 / OH-
Δ / H+
2. CARBONATION OF GRIGNARD REAGENTS

The addition of Grignard reagents to CO2 in form of dry ice gives


an acid with one more carbon more than the original Grignard reagent.

δ-

Example:

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3. HYDROLYSIS OF NITRILES:

Nitriles:

 They are prepared by reacting a 1° or 2° alkyl halide with cyanide salt.


 Acid hydrolysis of a nitriles yields a carboxylic acids.

+ NH3

Examples:

+ NH3

+ NH3

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REACTIONS
1. REACTION WITH BASES : SALT FORMATION
The carboxyl hydrogen is replaced by metal ion, M+

A) With strong base:

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B) With weak base

 Weaker acids like phenols react only with strong bases like
(NaOH or KOH) and will not react with NaHCO3

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2. REACTION WITH NUCLEOPHILES TO FORM ACID DERIVATIVES:
 When the OH of a carboxylic acid is replaced by a nucleophile, :Nu , a carboxylic
acid derivative is produced.

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MECHANISM:
The nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction

tetrahedral (sp3)
X is a leaving group
reactive intermediate

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Conversion of carboxylic acids to esters using acid and
alcohols (Fischer Esterification)

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DERIVATIVES OF CARBOXYLIC ACIDS

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Nomenclature: the functional derivatives’ names are derived from the
common or IUPAC names of the corresponding carboxylic acids.

ESTERS

alkyl alkanoate

Change –ic acid to –ate preceded by the alkyl is derived from the
alcohol, R'OH.

Examples:

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ACID CHLORIDES

Examples:

Change –ic acid to –yl chloride

ACID ANHYDRIDES

Examples:

Change acid to anhydride

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AMIDES

Examples:

Change -oic acid to –amide


ESTERS REACTIONS:

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ACID CHLORIDES REACTIONS:

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MECHANISM FROM ACID CHLORIDE TO ESTER

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MECHANISM FROM ACID CHLORIDE TO AMIDE

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ACID ANHYDRIDE REACTIONS:

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AMIDES REACTIONS:

4- Reaction of amides with alkaline hypohalite solution:


Reduced to amines containing one less carbon atom

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EXERCISE

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