Title: Amines, Aldehydes, Ketones
1Chemistry B11
Chapter 16,17 18 Amines, Aldehydes, Ketones
and Carboxylic Acids
2Amines
3Amines
- Amines
-
- Are derivatives of ammonia NH3.
- Contain N attached to one or more alkyl
(Aliphatic amine) or aromatic groups (Aromatic
amine). -
- CH3-NH2 CH3-NH-CH3
-NH2 amino group
NH2
4Amines
Amines are divided into the three groups
depending the number of carbon groups bonded to
nitrogen. CH3
CH3
? ? CH3NH2 CH3NH CH3NCH3
Tertiary 3
Secondary 2
Primary 1
5Naming Amines
IUPAC name 1 amines
Same method as we did for alcohols. - Drop the
final -e of the parent alkane and replace it by
-amine. - Use a number to locate the amino
group (-NH2) on the parent chain.
3
1
5
3
2
4
6
1
2
4
3
1
2
2-propanamine
3-chloro-2-butanamine
1,6-hexanediamine
6Naming Amines
Common name Names of alkyl groups (In
alphabetical order) amine CH3CH2NH2
ethylamine CH3NH CH3 dimethylamine
CH3 CH3NCH2CH3 ethyldimethylami
ne
7Aniline (common name)
NH2
Aniline
NH2
NH2
NH2
2
2
1
1
2
1
CH3
3
3
3
CH3
4
4
Cl
NO2
3-Methylaniline
4-Nitroaniline
4-chloro-3-Methylaniline
8Naming Amines
IUPAC name 2 and 3 amines
- Take the largest group bonded to nitrogen as the
parent amine. - Name the smaller group(s) bonded to nitrogen, and
show their location on nitrogen by using the
prefix N.
N,N-Dimethylethanamine
9Heterocyclic amines
When N is one of the atoms of a ring.
Pyrrolidine
Pyridine
Nicotine
10Physical properties of Amines
- They have unpleasant odors (rotting fish like
ammonia). - They are polar compounds.
- Difference electronegativity between N - H (3.0
2.1 0.9) - 3. 1 and 2 amines have hydrogen bond with each
other (N-H). - Weaker than alcohols (O-H).
- 3 amines do not have hydrogen bond (no H
atom). - Boiling point alkanes lt Amines lt Alcohols
- Almost soluble in water (hydrogen bonding).
11Chemical properties of Amines
They are weak bases (like ammonia) react with
acids.
(to form water-soluble salts)
Some amines present in our blood and make it
basic approximately (pH 7.4).
12Chemical properties of Amines
- Aliphatic amines are weak bases by comparison
with inorganic bases - such as NaOH, they are strong bases among organic
compounds.
Aliphatic amines are stronger base than aromatic
amines.
(slightly stronger than NH3)
13Examples
Complete each acid-base reaction and name the
salt formed.
14Examples
Complete each acid-base reaction and name the
salt formed.
Solutions
15Aldehydes Ketones
16Carbonyl group
Aldehydes
Ketones
Carboxylic acids
Esters
17Aldehydes and Ketones
O
C
- In an aldehyde, at least one H atom is attached
to a carbonyl group. - In a ketone, two carbon groups are attached to a
carbonyl group. -
18Naming Aldehydes
Step 1 Select the longest carbon chain that
contains the carbonyl group (CO).
Step 2 Number from the end nearest CO group.
Step 3 Change the ending of parent alkane from -e
to -al. No number for carbonyl group CO (it
always comes first).
Step 4 Give the location and name of each
substituent (alphabetical order) as a prefix to
the name of the main chain.
19Naming Aldehydes
- Common names for the first two aldehydes use the
prefixes form (1C) and acet (2C) followed by
aldehyde. - O O O
-
- H-C-H CH3- C -H CH3-CH2- C -H
-
- methanal ethanal
propanal - (formaldehyde) (acetaldehyde)
20- O
-
- CH3-CH-CH2- C-H 3-Methylbutanal
-
- O
-
- Cl-CH2-CH2- C-H 3-chloropropanal
-
CH3
3
4
1
2
3
2
1
21Naming Ketones
Step 1 Select the longest carbon chain that
contains the carbonyl group (CO).
Step 2 Number from the end nearest CO group.
Step 3 Change the ending of parent alkane from -e
to -one. Use the number to show the location of
CO.
Step 4 Give the location and name of each
substituent (alphabetical order) as a prefix to
the name of the main chain.
22Naming Ketones
- In the common name, name the alkyl groups
alphabetically attached to the carbonyl group and
add the word ketone. - O O
-
- CH3 - C -CH3 CH3-C-CH2-CH3
- propanone
2-butanone - (dimethyl ketone) (ethyl methyl ketone)
1
2
3
4
23Cl
24(No Transcript)
25Physical properties of Aldehydes and Ketones
- Strong odors (ketones have pleasant odor).
- They are polar compounds.
- Only dipole-dipole interaction (no hydrogen
bond). - Low boiling point compare to amines and alcohols.
- Soluble in water (no soluble in nonpolar
compounds).
C-O 3.5-2.5 1
Higher than alkanes.
H
O
d
H
Hydrogen bond with water.
26Chemical properties of Aldehydes and Ketones
1. Oxidation only for aldehydes (no ketones).
O
K2Cr2O7
CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-C-OH
H2SO4
Pentanoic acid
K2Cr2O7 Oxidizing agent
27Chemical properties of Aldehydes and Ketones
2. Reduction
- Like reducing the alkene (C C) to alkane (C
C) - Reduction of an aldehyde gives a primary alcohol
(-CH2OH). - Reduction of a ketone gives a secondary alcohol
(-CHOH-).
O
CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-C- H
CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2- OH
Pentanal
28Chemical properties of Aldehydes and Ketones
NaBH4
Sodium borohydride produces hydride ion H-
Reducing agent
Reduction mechanism
-
29Carboxylic Acids
30Carboxylic Acids
A carboxylic acid contains a carboxyl group,
which is a carbonyl group attach to a hydroxyl
group. carbonyl
group O ??
CH3 COH hydroxyl group or CH3COOH
carboxyl group
CH3CO2H
31Naming Carboxylic Acids
- In the IUPAC name of carboxylic acids, the e
in the name of the longest chain is replaced with
oic acid. - The common names use prefixes form- and acet-
for two first carboxylic acid. - H-COOH methanoic acid formic acid
- CH3-COOH ethanoic acid acetic acid
- CH3-CH2-COOH propanoic acid
- CH3-CH2-CH2-COOH butanoic acid
32Naming Carboxylic Acids
- Number the chain beginning with the carbon of the
carboxyl group. - Because the carboxyl carbon is understood to be
carbon 1, there is no need to give it a number.
CH2 CH3
CH3
1
3
1
2
CH3-CH-CH2-COOH
CH3-CH2-CH-COOH
2-Ethylbutanoic acid
3-Methylbutanoic acid
O
4
1
5
1
4-Aminobenzoic acid
5-Hydroxylhexanoic acid
33Naming Dicarboxylic Acids
- Add the suffix -dioic acid to the name of the
parent alkane that contains both carboxyl groups
thus, -ane becomes -anedioic acid. - The numbers of the carboxyl carbons are not
indicated because they can be only at the ends of
the chain.
O
O
O
1
1
3
2
O
Ehanedioic acid
Propanedioic acid
O
O
O
O
1
1
5
1
6
4
O
O
Butanedioic acid
Pentanedioic acid
Hexanedioic acid
34Physical properties of Carboxylic Acids
- 1- The carboxyl group contains three polar
covalent bonds - CO, C-O, and O-H. So they are so polar.
- 2- Carboxylic acids have higher boiling points
than other types of organic compounds (with same
molecular weight) because of hydrogen bonding. - 3- They are more soluble in water than alcohols,
ethers, aldehydes, and ketones because of
stronger hydrogen bond. - 4- Liquid carboxylic acids have sharp and
disagreeable odors. - 5- They taste sour (exist in pickle, lime and
lemon).
35Fatty Acids
- Long, unbranched chain carboxylic acids are found
in animal fats, vegetable oils, or phospholipids
of biological membranes. - Most have between 12 and 20 carbons in an
unbranched chain. - In most unsaturated fatty acids, the cis isomer
is usually existed and the trans isomer is rare. - Unsaturated fatty acids have lower melting points
than their saturated counterparts.
Cis
36Fatty Acids
Saturated fatty acids are solids at room
temperature.
Packed together ? Maximum London dispersion forces
37Fatty Acids
Unsaturated fatty acids are liquids at room
temperature.
Can not packed together ? London dispersion forces
Cis
38Esters
In an ester, the H in the carboxyl group is
replaced with an alkyl group.
O ?? CH3 CO CH3 ester group
39Soaps
- Natural soaps are sodium or potassium salts of
fatty acids. - They are prepared from a blend of tallow and palm
oils (triglycerides). - Triglycerides are triesters of glycerol.
- the solid fats are melted with steam and the
water insoluble triglyceride layer that forms on
the top is removed.
CH2 CH CH2
OH
OH
OH
1,2,3-Propanetriol (glycerol, glycerin)
40Soaps
- Preparation of soaps begins by boiling the
triglycerides with NaOH. The reaction that takes
place is called saponification. - Boiling with KOH gives a potassium soap.
41Soaps
Hydrophobic part nonpolar
Hydrophilic part polar in contact with
environment.
42Soaps
When soap is mixed with dirt (grease, oil and
), soap micelles dissolve these nonpolar,
water-insoluble molecules.
43Chemical properties of Carboxylic Acids
1- They are weak acids. Substituents of high
electronegativity, especially -OH, -Cl, and
-NH3, near the carboxyl group increase the
acidity of carboxylic acids. 2- Reaction with
bases
react with NaOH, KOH, NH3, and other strong
bases to form water-soluble salts.
44Chemical properties of Carboxylic Acids
3- Fischer Esterification - A carboxylic acid
reacts with an alcohols to form an ester. -
Using an acid catalyst like concentrated sulfuric
acid.
Best way to prepare an ester.