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Lesson 4 Aldehydes and Ketone

This document provides an overview of organic chemistry concepts related to aldehydes and ketones. It defines their structures, naming conventions using IUPAC nomenclature, physical properties including polarity and solubility, characteristic reactions of oxidation and reduction, and types of isomers such as chiral and achiral compounds. Key topics covered include how to identify and name aldehydes and ketones, compare their boiling points and water solubility, describe their oxidation to carboxylic acids and reduction to alcohols, and explain chiral isomers.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
141 views4 pages

Lesson 4 Aldehydes and Ketone

This document provides an overview of organic chemistry concepts related to aldehydes and ketones. It defines their structures, naming conventions using IUPAC nomenclature, physical properties including polarity and solubility, characteristic reactions of oxidation and reduction, and types of isomers such as chiral and achiral compounds. Key topics covered include how to identify and name aldehydes and ketones, compare their boiling points and water solubility, describe their oxidation to carboxylic acids and reduction to alcohols, and explain chiral isomers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Organic Chemistry

Lesson 4/Midterms
Aldehydes and Ketones • Indicate the presence of the carbonyl group by
changing the -ane of the parent alkane -one.
Structure • Number the parent chain from the direction that
gives the carbonyl carbon the smaller number.
• IUPAC retains the common name acetone for 2-
• The functional group of an aldehyde is a carbonyl propanone.
group bonded to a hydrogen atom.
o In methanal, the simplest aldehyde
(formaldehyde), the carbonyl group is bonded
to 2 hydrogens. • To name an aldehyde or ketone that also contains an
o In other aldehydes, it is bonded to 1 hydrogen -OH (hydroxyl) or -NH2 (amino) group:
and 1 carbon group. o Number the parent chain to give the carbonyl
• The functional group of a ketone is a carbonyl group carbon the lower number.
bonded to 2 carbon groups. o Indicate an -OH substituent by hydroxy-, and an
-NH2 substituent by amino-.
o Hydroxy and amino substituents are numbered and
alphabetized along with other substituents.
Nomenclature: Beyond Ordinary Cases
• A carbon atom adjacent to a carbonyl group is called
an a-carbon, and a hydrogen atom bonded to it is
called an a-hydrogen.
Nomenclature
• IUPAC names for aldehydes:
o To name an aldehyde, change the suffix -e
of the parent alkane to -al.
o Because the carbonyl group of an aldehyde
can only be at the end of a parent chain and • On a molecule with a higher priority functional
numbering must start with it as carbon-1, group, C=O is oxo- and -CHO is formyl.
hence, there is no need to use a number to • Aldehyde priority is higher than ketone.
locate the aldehyde group.

• For unsaturated aldehydes, indicate the presence of Common Names


a carbon-carbon double bond by changing the • The common name for an aldehyde is derived from
ending of the parent alkane from -ane to –enal. the common name of the corresponding carboxylic
• Numbering the carbon chain begins with the acid; drop the word "acid" and change the suffix -ic
aldehyde carbonyl carbon. or -oic to -aldehyde
• Name each alkyl or aryl group bonded to the
• Show the location of the carbon-carbon double bond
carbonyl carbon as a separate word, followed by the
by the number of its first carbon. word "ketone”; the alkyl or aryl groups are
generally listed in order of increasing molecular
weight

• The IUPAC system retains common names for some


aldehydes, including these three. Physical Properties
IUPAC names for Ketones: • A C=O bond is polar, with oxygen bearing a partial
negative charge and carbon bearing a partial positive
charge
o Therefore, aldehydes and ketones are polar
• Parent alkane 🡪 longest chain that contains the molecules
carbonyl group.
Organic Chemistry
Lesson 4/Midterms

• In liquid aldehydes and ketones, the weak


intermolecular attractions are between the partial
Physical Property: Solubility
positive charge on the carbonyl carbon of one
molecule and the partial negative charge on the
carbonyl oxygen of another molecule.
• No hydrogen bonding is possible between aldehyde
or ketone molecules.
• Aldehydes and ketones have lower boiling points
than alcohols and carboxylic acids, compounds in
which there is hydrogen bonding between
molecules.
• Formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and acetone are
infinitely soluble in water.
• Aldehydes and ketones become less soluble in water
• The polar carbonyl group provides dipole-dipole as the hydrocarbon portion of the molecule increases
interactions. in size.
• Without an H on the oxygen atom, aldehydes and
ketones cannot form hydrogen bonds.
• Aldehydes and ketones can form hydrogen bonds
with the water molecules.
Comparison of Boiling Points Types of isomers
• Aldehydes and ketones have higher boiling points
than alkanes and ethers of similar mass, but lower
boiling points than alcohols.

Chiral objects
For compounds of comparable molecular weight… • Chiral compounds have the same number of atoms
arranged differently in space.
• A chiral carbon atom is bonded to four different
groups.
• Your hands are chiral. Try to superimpose your
Water Solubility thumbs, palms, back of hands, and little fingers.
• Ketones and Aldehydes, like ethers, can function as
hydrogen bond acceptors and smaller compounds Mirror images
have significant water solubility. • The mirror images of chiral compounds cannot be
• Solubility in Water: the electronegative O atom of superimposed.
the carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones forms • When the H and I atoms are aligned, the Cl and Br
hydrogen bonds with water. atoms are on opposite sites.
Organic Chemistry
Lesson 4/Midterms
Some everyday chiral achiral objects Reduction

• The carbonyl group of an aldehyde or ketone is


reduced to an -CHOH or -CH 2OH group by
hydrogen in the presence of a transition-metal
catalyst:
o Reduction of an aldehyde gives a primary
Characteristic Reaction: Oxidation alcohol.
• Aldehydes are oxidized to carboxylic acids by a o Reduction a ketone gives a secondary alcohol.
variety of oxidizing agents, including potassium • The most common laboratory reagent for the
dichromate. reduction of an aldehyde or ketone is Sodium
borohydride, NaBH4.
o This reagent contains hydrogen in the form of
hydride ion, H: -.
• Liquid aldehydes are so sensitive to oxidation by O 2 o In a hydride ion, hydrogen has two valence
of the air that they must be protected from contact
electrons and bears a negative charge.
with air during storage.
o In a reduction by Sodium borohydride, hydride
ion adds to the partially positive carbonyl carbon
which leaves a negative charge on the carbonyl
oxygen.
o Reaction of this intermediate with aqueous acid
gives the alcohol.
Oxidation
• Ketones resist oxidation by most oxidizing agents,
including potassium dichromate and molecular O.
o Tollens’ reagent is specific for the oxidation of
aldehydes; if done properly, silver deposits on the
walls of the container as a silver mirror. • Reduction by NaBH4 does not affect a carbon-
carbon double bond or an aromatic ring.

• In biological systems, the agent for the reduction of


aldehydes and ketones is the reduced form of
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, abbreviated
NADH (Section 26.3)
o This reducing agent, like NaBH4, delivers a
hydride ion to the carbonyl carbon of the
aldehyde or ketone.
o Reduction of pyruvate, the end product of
glycolysis, by NADH gives lactate.

A reduction of Tollen's reagent (an ammoniacal silver


nitrate complex) by glucose solution to form silver
mirror. Addition of Alcohols
Glucose is oxidized to gluconic acid. This reaction is • Addition of a molecule of alcohol to the carbonyl
used as a test for aldehyde groups in organic chemicals group of an aldehyde or ketone forms a hemiacetal
(as well as for making silver mirror), which includes (a half-acetal).
formaldehyde, acetaldehyde and glucose. o The functional group of a hemiacetal is a carbon
bonded to one -OH group and one -OR group.
Organic Chemistry
Lesson 4/Midterms
o In forming a hemiacetal, H of the alcohol adds to
the carbonyl oxygen and OR adds to the carbonyl
carbon.

• Hemiacetals are generally unstable and are only


minor components of an equilibrium mixture except
in one very important type of molecule:
• When a hydroxyl group is part of the same molecule
that contains the carbonyl group and a five- or six-
membered ring can form, the compound exists
almost entirely in a cyclic hemiacetal form.

• A hemiacetal can react further with an alcohol to


form an acetal plus water.
o This reaction is acid catalyzed.
o The functional group of an acetal is a carbon
bonded to two -OR groups.

• All steps in hemiacetal and acetal formation are


reversible.
• As with any other equilibrium, we can drive this one
in either direction by using Le Chatelier's principle.
• To drive it to the right, we either use a large excess
of alcohol or remove water from the equilibrium
mixture
• To drive it to the left, we use a large excess of water.

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