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Aldehydes

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Title: Aldehydes


1
Chapter 19
Aldehydes Ketones Nucleophilic Addition
Reactions
2
Aldehyde Nomenclature
  • Find the longest chain that contains the
    aldehyde.
  • The suffix al replaces the e of the
    corresponding alkane.
  • The carbonyl carbon receives the lowest number.
  • Branches are named using the IUPAC system
  • Complex aldehydes (-CHO is attached to a ring)
    use the suffix -carbaldehyde

3
Examples
2-Ethyl-4-methylpentanal
4
Common Names of Aldehydes
5
Ketone Nomenclature
  • Find the longest chain that contains the ketone
    (it MUST NOT BE at the end)
  • Use the base hydrocarbon name drop the e and
    replace with one.
  • The carbonyl group has to be assigned the lowest
    possible number.
  • In complex molecules, the carbonyl group can be
    named as a prefix with the term oxo-

6
Refering as Subsituents
  • RCO-
    Acyl
  • CH3CO-
    Acetyl
  • -CHO
    Formyl
  • C6H5CO-
    Benzoyl
  • In complex molecules, the carbonyl group can be
    named as a prefix with the term oxo-
  • methyl 3-oxohexanoate

7
Ketone Nomenclature Examples
3-Hexanone
4-Hexen-2-one
2,4 Hexanedione
8
Common Names of Some Ketones
Acetone
Acetophenone
Benzophenone
9
Synthesis of Aldehydes
  • Oxidation of 1 alcohols

10
Synthesis of Aldehydes
  • Oxidative cleavage of alkenes w/ O3, Zn, CH3COOH

11
Synthesis of Aldehydes
  • Partial reduction of certain carboxylic acid
    derivatives

12
Synthesis of Ketones
  • Oxidation of 2 alcohols w/ PCC and base

13
Synthesis of Ketones
  • Ozonolysis of alkenes, if one of the unsaturated
    carbon atoms is disubstituted.

14
Synthesis of Ketones
  • Friedel-Crafts acylation aryl
    ketones

15
Synthesis of Ketones
  • Hydration of terminal alkynes methyl
    ketones

16
Synthesis of Ketones continue
17
Synthesis of Ketones
  • From certain carboxylic acid derivatives using a
    Gilman reagent (R2Cu-Li)

18
Oxidation of Aldehydes and Ketones
  • aldehydes- readily oxidized to form carboxylic
    acids
  • Ketones-inert but can be with hot alkaline KMnO4
  • REASON aldehydes have a CHO proton that can be
    removed during oxidation ketones dont.
  • Oxidizing agents KMnO4
  • HNO3
  • CrO3 in acidic conditions
  • Tollens reagent (Ag2O) in aqueous
    ammonia

19
Aldehyde Oxidation
  • Occur through intermediate 1,1-diols, or hydrates.

H2O
An aldehyde
A hydrate
A carboxylic acid
20
Mechanism of Aldehyde Oxidation
21
Mechanism of Aldehyde Oxidation continue
22
Ketone Oxidation
  • Inert to most oxidizing agents
  • Ketones undergo slow cleavage when treated with
    hot alkaline KMnO4

1.
2.
23
Nucleophilic Addition Rxns of Aldehydes and
Ketones
  • Nucleophile attacks the electrophilic CO carbon
    from a direction 45 to the plane of the
    carbonyl group.
  • At the same time Rehybridization of the
    carbonyl carbon from sp2 to sp3 occurs, an
    electron pair from the carbon-oxygen double bond
    moves toward the electronegative oxygen atom, and
    a tetrahedral alkoxide ion intermediate is
    produced.

24
Attacking Nucleophiles
  • Can be negatively charged or neutral at the
    reaction site
  • Negatively charged Nucleophiles
  • HO- (hydroxide ion)
  • H- (hydride ion)
  • R3C- (a carbanion)
  • RO- (an alkoxide ion)
  • CN- (cyanide ion)
  • Neutral Nucleophiles
  • H2O (water)
  • ROH (an alcohol)
  • H3N (ammonia)
  • RNH2 (an amine)

25
Nucleophilic Addition Rxns of Aldehydes and
Ketones
  • Formation of an alcohol

26
Nucleophilic Addition Rxns of Aldehydes and
Ketones
  • Elimination of the carbonyl oxygen atom at HO-
    or H2O to give a product with CNu double bond.

27
Relative Reactivity of Aldehydes and Ketones
  • Reactivity in nucleophilic addition rxns
  • Aldehydes gtgtgt ketones
  • aliphatic aldehydes gtgtgt aromatic aldehydes

28
Steric Reason why Aldehydes are More Reactive
than Ketones
  • nucleophile is able to approach aldehydes more
    readily because it only has 1 large substituent
    bonded to the CO carbon, vs. 2 in ketones.
  • transition state for the aldehyde rxn is
    therefore less crowded and has lower energy.
  • aldehyde
    ketone

29
Electronic Reason why Aldehydes are More Reactive
than Ketones
  • greater polarization of aldehyde carbonyl group
  • aldehyde is more electrophilic and more reactive
    than ketones.


2carbocation (more stable, less
reactive)

Ketone (more stabilization of ?, less
reactive)
1 carbocation (less stable,
more reactive)
Aldehyde (less stabilization of ?, more
reactive)
?-
?-
?
?
30
Why aromatic aldehydes gtgtgt aliphatic aldehydes
  • The electon-donating resonance effect of the
    aromatic ring makes the carbonyl group less
    electrophilic than the carbonyl group of the
    aliphatic aldehyde.

31
Why aromatic aldehydes gtgtgt aliphatic
aldehydesexample
  • Comparing electrostatic potential maps of
    formaldehyde and benzaldehyde, shows that the
    carbonyl carbon atom is less positive in the
    aromatic aldehyde
  • formaldehyde benzaldehyde

32
Nucleophilic Addition of H2O Hydration
  • Aldehydes and ketones react with water to yield a
    geminal diol. This hydration process is
    reversible.
  • Nucleophilic addition of water is catalyzed by
    acid and base.
  • Base-catalyzed
  • Acid-catalyzed

33
Nucleophilic Addition of HCN Cyanohydrin
Formation
  • Aldehydes and unhindered ketones react with HCN
    to yield cyanohydrins. This formation is
    reversible and base-catalyzed.
  • Cyanohydrins formation is unusual due to the
    addition of protic acid to a carbonyl group,
    but useful because of further chemistry.
  • Reduced with LiAlH4, yielding primary amine.
  • Hydrolyzed with hot aqueous acid, yielding
    carboxylic acid.

34
Nucleophilic Addition of Grignard Hydride
Reagents Alcohol Formation
  • Grignard reagents R-MgX, strongly polarized
    reacts with an acid-base behavior.
    Nucleophilic addition of a carbanion to an
    aldehyde or ketone, followed by protonation of
    alkoxide intermediate, yields an alcohol.
  • Addition of hydride ion, from LiAlH4 or NaBH4,
    and water or aqueous acid yields an alcohol.

35
Nucleophilic Addition of AminesImine and
Enamine Formation
  • Difference between imine and enamine is the CN
    bond and CC bond.

36
Nucleophilic Addition of AminesMechanism of 1º
amines forming Imine
37
Nucleophilic Addition of AminesMechanism of 2º
amines forming Enamine
38
Nucleophilic Addition of HydrazineWolff-Kishner
Reaction
  • Addition of hydrazine converts aldehyde/ketone to
    an alkane. An intermediate hydrazone forms,
    followed by base catalyzed double bond migration,
    loss of N2 gas, finally protonation yields an
    alkane.

39
Nucleophilic Addition of Alcohols Acetal
Formation
  • Acetals and Ketals are formed by reacting two
    equivalents of an alcohol with an aldehyde or
    ketone, in the presence of an acid catalyst.
  • Hemiacetals and Hemiketals are formed by reacting
    only one equivalent of alcohol with the aldehyde
    or ketone in the presence of an acid catalyst.
    Further reaction with a second alcohol forms the
    acetal or ketal.
  • A diol, with two OH groups on the same molecule,
    can be used to form cyclic acetals.
  • All steps in acetal/ketal formation are
    reversible.

40
  • Acetal
    Ketal
  • Hemiacetal
    Hemiketal

41
Mechanism of Acetal Formation
42
Nucleophilic Addition of Phosphorus Ylides The
Wittig Reaction
  • Converts an aldehyde/ketone into an alkene.
  • A phosphorus ylide(aka phosphorane),
    ,
  • acts as the nucleophile to attack the
    carbonyl carbon
  • and yields a four-membered ring, dipolar
    intermediate
  • called the betaine.
  • The betaine decomposes spontaneously to yield an
  • alkene and a triphenylphosphine oxide.
  • Can produce monosubstituted, disubstituted, and
  • trisubstituted alkenes.

43
Mechanism of the Witting Reaction
44
The Canizzaro Reaction
  • Requires two equivalents of an aldehyde and a
    heated aqueous base.
  • Produces a 11 mixture of carboxylic acid and
    alcohol.
  • Limited to aldehydes such as formaldehyde and
    benzaldehyde, which have no hydrogens on carbon
    next to carbonyl.
  • Results in simultaneous oxidation and reduction,
    disproportionation.
  • Steps
  • 1. Nucleophillic addition of OH- to first
    aldehyde forms a tetrahedral
  • intermediate.
  • 2. Tetrahedral intermediate then expels the
    hydride ion as a leaving
  • group.
  • 3. The second aldehyde picks up the hydride
    ion.
  • 4. Oxidation of second product yields the
    acid while reduction of
  • the first product yields an alcohol.

45
Mechanism of Cannizzaro Reaction
46
Conjugate Nucleophilic Addition to
alpha,beta-Unsaturated Aldehydes and Ketones
  • Direct addition (aka 1,2 addition) occurs when a
    nucleophile attacks the carbon in the carbonyl
    directly.
  • Conjugate addition (aka 1,4 addition) occurs when
    the nucleophile attacks the carbonyl indirectly
    by attacking the second carbon away from the
    carbonyl group, called the beta carbon, in an
    unsaturated aldehyde or ketone.
  • Conjugate addition reactions form an initial
    product called an enolate, which is protonated on
    the carbon next to the carbonyl, the alpha
    carbon, to give the final saturated
    aldehyde/ketone product.
  • Conjugate addition can be carried out with
    nucleophiles such as primary amines, secondary
    amines, and even alkyl groups like in
    organocopper reactions.
  • It is the carbonyl that activates the conjugated
    CC double bond for addition which would
    otherwise not react.

47
Conjugate (1,4) addition mechanism
48
Some Biological Nucleophilic Addition Reactions
  • Living organisms use nucleophilic addition
    reactions involving aldehydes and ketones in
    nature.
  • Examples
  • -In Metabolism Breakdown of alanine
  • -In Defense Secretion of poison by the
    millipede

49
A Nucleophilic Addition Reaction Metabolism
  • The human body uses the amino acid alanine to
    react with pyridoxal phosphate, an aldehyde, in a
    metabolic reaction to produce an imine.

50
A Nucleophilic Addition Reaction Defense
  • Apheloria corrugata, a millipede, discharges
    poisonous HCN at attackers.
  • The millipede secretes the mandelonitrile
    molecule and another enzyme that breaks it down
    into benzaldeyde and HCN.

51
Spectroscopy of Aldehydes and Ketones
  • Aldehydes and Ketones show characteristic
    absorptions in Infrared Spectroscopy, Nuclear
    Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, and Mass
    Spectrometry.

52
Infrared Spectroscopy of Aldehydes/Ketones
  • Aldehydes/Ketones show a strong CO bond
    absorption at 1660-1770 cm-1.
  • Aldehydes show two characteristic absorptions in
    the
  • 2720-2820 cm-1 range.
  • Conjugation of an aldehyde lowers absorption
    position.
  • Angle strain in the carbonyl group of a ketone
    caused by reducing the ring size of cyclic
    ketones raises absorption position.

53
IR of Benzaldehyde and Cyclohexanone
54
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of Aldehydes/Ketones
  • H NMR
  • Aldehyde protons absorb near 10 ppm.
  • Hydrogens next to the carbonyls of aldehydes and
    ketones are slightly deshielded and absorb near 2
    to 2.3 ppm.
  • Methyl ketones show a sharp three-proton singlet
    near 2.1 ppm.
  • Aldehyde and ketone carbonyl carbons show
    absorptions between 190 to 215 ppm.
  • Saturated aldehyde or ketone carbons absorb in
    the 200 to 215 ppm range.
  • Aromatic and a,b-unsaturated carbonyl carbons
    absorb in the 190 to 200 ppm range.
  • C NMR

55
H NMR of Acetaldehyde
56
Mass Spectrometry of Aldehydes/Ketones
  • Alipatic aldehydes and ketones that have
    hydrogens on their gamma carbon atoms undergo
    McLafferty rearrangement.

57
Mass Spectrum of 5-methyl-2-hexanone
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