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Chemistry of Alcohols and Hydroxy Compounds

(1) Alcohols undergo several characteristic reactions including combustion, substitution to form halogenoalkanes, reaction with sodium to form alkoxides, and oxidation to carbonyl compounds or carboxylic acids depending on conditions. (2) Alcohols are classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary based on the carbon the hydroxyl group is attached to. Primary alcohols can be oxidized to aldehydes or acids while secondary alcohols produce ketones. Tertiary alcohols do not oxidize. (3) Other reactions include ester formation, and dehydration of longer chain alcohols to produce alkenes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views10 pages

Chemistry of Alcohols and Hydroxy Compounds

(1) Alcohols undergo several characteristic reactions including combustion, substitution to form halogenoalkanes, reaction with sodium to form alkoxides, and oxidation to carbonyl compounds or carboxylic acids depending on conditions. (2) Alcohols are classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary based on the carbon the hydroxyl group is attached to. Primary alcohols can be oxidized to aldehydes or acids while secondary alcohols produce ketones. Tertiary alcohols do not oxidize. (3) Other reactions include ester formation, and dehydration of longer chain alcohols to produce alkenes.

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Saqib Hussain
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10.

4 Hydroxy Compounds

Alcohols
Learning Outcomes
(a) recall the chemistry of alcohols, exemplified by ethanol:

(i) combustion
(ii) substitution to give halogenoalkanes
(iii) reaction with sodium
(iv) oxidation to carbonyl compounds and carboxylic acids
(v) dehydration to alkenes
(vi) ester formation

(b) (i) classify hydroxy compounds into primary, secondary


and tertiary alcohols
(ii) suggest characteristic distinguishing reactions e.g. mild oxidation
Alcohols
Primary alcohols

Secondary alcohols

Tertiary alcohols
(i) Combustion

C2H5OH(l) + 3O2(g) 2CO2(g) + 3H2O(l)

(ii) substitution to give halogenoalkanes

Alcohols react with hydrogen halides (HCl, HBr, HI) to give the
halogenoalkane

2KBr(s) + H2SO4(l) K2SO4(s) + 2HBr(g)

C2H5OH(l) + HBr(g) acid catalyst


C2H5Br(l) + H2O(l)

With potassium iodide, phosphoric(V) acid is used, as conc. sulphuric


reacts with KI to produce iodine.
Mechanism of substitution
SN2 mechanism - nucleophilic substitution: Primary Alcohols

H H H H H
fast H
H C C O + H+ H C C O
+ H
H H H H

H H H slow H H
H C C O H C C X + H2 O
+ H
H H H H
X-

SN1 mechanism - nucleophilic substitution: Tertiary Alcohols

CH3 CH3 fast CH3


H slow
H3C C O H3C C + X- H3C C X
+
CH3 H -H2O CH3 CH3
carbocation

A tertiary alcohol will react with concentrated acids, e.g. shake with conc. HCl
(iii) Reaction with sodium

2C2H5OH(l) + 2Na(s) C2H5O-Na+(s) + H2(g)


sodium ethoxide

Alkoxides are strongly basic and will remove a proton from water to form a
hydroxide ion (pH 14), so they are not used in aqueous solution!

C2H5O-Na+(s) + H20(l) C2H5OH (l) + Na(OH)(aq)

Alkoxides are also good nucleophiles (S2N); ether formation:


Ester formation (esterification)

Esters are fragrant smelling liquids used in perfumes and fruit flavourings
(often larger molecular masses) formed when an alcohol reacts with a
carboxylic acid in the presence of an acid catalyst (small amount of conc.
H2SO4). It is an equilibrium reaction.

acid + alcohol ester


ethyl ethanoate
Esters are named with the alcohol side first (ethyl from ethanol)
then the carboxylic acid (ethanoate from ethanoic acid). It is not necessary to
understand the mechanism of their formation (catalytic addition to C=O/elimination
of H2O).
(iv) Oxidation to carbonyl compounds and carboxylic acids

Primary alcohols can be oxidised to either aldehydes or carboxylic acids


depending on the reaction conditions. In the case of the formation of carboxylic
acids, the alcohol is first oxidised to an aldehyde which is then oxidised further
to the acid. Note that the orange chromate(VI) is reduced to green Cr3+(aq).
The Police use this procedure to detect alcohol levels in the breath of drunk drivers.

(a) Partial oxidation to the aldehyde

You get an aldehyde if you excess of the alcohol and distill off the aldehyde
as soon as it forms.
(b) Full oxidation to the carboxylic acid

You need to use excess of the oxidizing agent and make sure the
aldehyde formed half-way stays in the reaction mixture. Again we see a colour
change in the chromate.
Secondary alcohols

Secondary alcohols are oxidized to ketones; there is no further oxidation


to the carboxylic acid

For example, if you heat the secondary alcohol propan-2-ol


with sodium or potassium dichromate(VI) solution acidified
with dilute sulphuric acid, you get propanone formed.

Tertiary alcohols can’t be oxidized in this way. We can used selective oxidation
as distinguishing reactions between primary, secondary and tertiary alcohols.
In summary:
Dehydration to alkenes

With longer chain or branched alcohols, a mixture of alkenes may be produced


including cis and trans isomers, at around 600 K.

Aluminium oxide is often used (or a ceramic like pumice). Concentrated sulphuric
and phosphoric (V) acids are alternative dehydrating agents when boiled.

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