organic chemistry chapter 18, Organic Chemistry 2, 2nd Exam, Reaction mechanisms 3- carboxylic acid derivates, Organic Chemistry Reactions & Mechanisms, Organic Chemistry 2 mechanisms, MCAT Organic Chemistry: Alcohols, reaction of Alkenes, Aromatic R...

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Pyridium Chlorochromate (PCC)

** stops at an aldehyde due to lack of H2O PCC is an inorganic solvent turns alcohol into aldehyde (double bond O and an H )

Acid Catalyzed Dehydration Alcohol---> alkene

**requires a strong acid H2SO4 in 180 degrees c.(heat) OH is removed and double bond forms zaitsevs rule (more sub carbon get double bond)

oxymercuration reaction: what is the electrophile

+Hg(OAC) adds to the pi bond

Mechanism of hydroboration

-Borans adds to the double bond in a single step -boron adds to the less subsititued carbon -this orientation places the partial positive charge in the transition state on the more highly subsititued carbon atom

acid-catalyzed opening of epoxides in alcohol: what is the nucleophile?

-alchohol and it attacks and opens the epoxide

Synthesis of epoxides: is carried out in what type of environment and why?

-in an aprotic acid to prevent the opening of the epoxide

formation of halogydrin: what drives the opening of a halonium ion?

-its electrophilic nature -the weak nucleophile attacks the carbon bearing more positive charge

How does oxymercuration-Demercuration differ from hydration?

-milder conditions -no rearrangements or polymerization

LiAlH4

-reduce aldehydes, ketones, esters, and carboxylic acids to alcohols, and amides and nitriles to amines -will also open epoxides

base-catalyzed opening of epoxides: what is obtained after protonation

-the diol is obtained after protonation of the alkoxide with water

stereochemsitry of hydroboration

-the hydroboration step adds the hydrogen and the boron to the same side of the double bond (syn addition) -when boron is oxidized, the OH will keep the same stereochemcial orientation

Pinacol Rearrangement

1,2 diols 1.ketone 2. rearranged product

What factors will help carbocation formation and therefore increase the rate of an Sn1 reaction?

1. Highly substituted carbons. 2. Polar solvents (Surround and isolate the carbocation) 3. Good leaving groups (Weak bases)

1. NaNO2, HCl 2. H3PO2

1. converts PhNH2 --> PhN2 (aniline --> aryldiazonium salt) 2. converts PhN2 —> Ph

oxymercuration reaction: what is the reagent? what does it do?

1. mercury (II) -it dissociates slightly to form +Hg(OAc)

the double bond acts as a_____ attacking_________species

1. nucelophile 2.attacking electrophilic species

mechanism for nucleophilic addition in basic medium

1. nucleophile attacks carbonyl 2. proton transfer 3. enantiomers

mechanism for nucleophilic addition in acidic medium

1. proton transfer (carbocation) 2. nucleophile adds 3. water attacks hydrogen 4. enantiomers

Addition-Elimination Mechanism

1. ring must contain very strong deactivating group (EWG - ex. NO2) 2. LG = ex. X (halogen) 3. rxn is only possible if deactivating group is ortho or para to LG

Things to know about titration of amino acids...

1.Buffering capacity is greatest at the Ka's 2. Two moles of base need to be added in order to deprotonate one mole of most a.a. 3. When adding base, the carboxyl group looses the H first. 4. Titrations can be done in reverse starting with a basic solution and adding acid.

What are the steps for hydration

1.Protonation of the double bond forms a carbocation 2.Nucleophilic attack of water 3.Deprotonation of the alcohol

how does demercuration differ form oxymercuration?

1.The NaBH4 replaces the mercuric acetate

How many moles of alkene can react with each mole of BH3

3 moles

How many moles of acid are needed to neutralize 1 mole of a basic amino acid?

3 moles because of the extra R amino group.

What is an amino acid called after it becomes a part of a peptide?

A residue.

Chlorination of benzene

A similar reaction as bromination of benzene occurs when chlorine is used rather than bromine.

What free radical is most is likely to be formed from bromination?

A tertiary radical (Most stable)

When is vacuum filtration used?

ABOVE 150 C BOILING POINTS! Vacuum will lower the pressure of the apparatus to ensure that the liquids do not decompensate under the extreme temperatures.

Deprotection

Acetals/Ketals will not be oxidized by LiAlH4 & can be reverted back to carbonyl with an aqueous acid

When carbonyl's are attacked by hydrolysis, what does the nucleophile look like in acidic vs basic conditions?

Acidic: H₂O is attacking Basic: OH- is attacking In acidic conditions the carbonyl oxygen is protonated.

What is the order of reactivity for carboxylic acid derivatives?

Acyl halide > anhydrides > esters > amides

Bromine test for unsaturation

Add Br2 in CCl4 (dark,red-brown color) to an alkene 1.If the color changes then the bromine was added to the double bond 2.If there is no double there color changes

How do you form an ester with a carboxylic acid?

Addition of a primary alcohol under ACIDIC conditions.

Friedel-Crafts Alkylation

After formation of the carbocation, two steps are involved in this electrophilic aromatic substitution. In the first step, the aromatic ring functions as a nucleophile and attacks the carbocation, forming a sigma complex. The sigma complex is then deprotonated to restore aromaticity.

How do you get glycosides from your hemiacetal monosaccharide?

Alcohol in the presence of ACID!!

-OH as a protecting group

Alcohols can be used protecting groups for other functional groups such as aldehydes and ketones React an aldehyde with 2 equivalents of an alcohol (or a diol) to form an acetal (primary carbon with two -OR groups) React a ketone with 2 equivalents of an alcohol (or a diol) to form a ketal (secondary carbon with two -OR groups)

Monosaccharide ester formation

All hydroxyl groups will be esterified!

How does isoelectric focusing work?

All proteins have an isoelectric point (no charge). When the molecule reaches the field that is equal to its isoelectric point, it will stop moving!

Mesyl and Tosyl groups

Also serve as protecting groups (prevent reactions with -OH on a molecule) when reacted with an oxidizing agent

_____________ ____________ ______ is another common Lewis acid that can serve as a suitable alternative to FeBr3 for the bromination of benzene

Aluminum tribromide (AlBr3)

What is hofmann rearrangement?

An amide to a primary amine (Pg 389)

Friedel Crafts Acylation

Aromatic ring acylated through electrophillic aromatic substitution.

When does an amino acid take on the zwitterion form?

At the isoelectric point or isoelectric pH between pKa₁ and pKa₂

Base Catalyzed Epoxide Opening -OCH3/HOCH3

Attacks least substituted

Acid Catalyzed Epoxide Opening H+/HOCH3

Attacks most substituted

Diborane

B2H6 is a dimer of borane and is in equilibrium with a small amount of BH3

What kind of bond does Cellulose have vs Starch and glycogen?

BETA 1, 4 vs the ALPHA of starch and glycogen (some α 1,6 in there too!)

How do Agrose gel and SDS-PAGE electrophoresis separate molecules?

Based on SIZE

Primary Alcohol to Carboxylic Acid

Bleach, Chromic Acid

Secondary alcohols Ketones

Bleach, Chromic Acid, PCC, DMP, Swern

pyridine with Br2, 300 degrees

Br adds

pyridine with Br2, CH3COOH, 20 degrees, -HBr

Br adds

What is the purpose of Infrared (IR) spectroscopy?

Certain bonds absorb infrared light at different frequencies and this can then be measured through what is absorbed vs what is transmitted. Used for FUNCTIONAL GROUP identification.

pyridine with Cl2, -HCl

Cl adds

1 Alcohol to Cl substituent Br substituent

Cl: 1,2 SOCL2 3 HCL Br: 1,2 PBr3 3 HBr

Ubiquinone

Coenzyme Q; example of a biologically active Quinone (involved complexes I, II, III of ETC; lipid soluble because of longe alkyl chain) Ubiquinone is most oxidized form: can be reduced to Ubiquinol when it picks up electrons

Tosylates

Compound containing -SO3C6H4CH3 Derived from toluensulfonic acid

Mesylate

Compound containing -SO3CH3 Derived from methanesulfonic acid

Jones Oxidation

CrO3, H2SO4 + acetone Converts: primary alcohol --> carboxylic acid secondary alcohol --> ketone

Primary Alcohol to Aldehydes

DMP, PCC, Swern

What are epimers?

Diastereomers that differ in the configuration of ONE carbon.

What are nucleophiles?

Electron-rich species that are attracted to a positively polarized atom (i.e. a carbonyl carbon)

MCPBA

Epoxide ring forms from double bond

What is a better nucleophile I or F?

Flourine

How do you make OH- a good leaving group for Sn1 and Sn2 reactions?

For Sn1 you can protonate it and make water the leaving group. For Sn2 you can convert it to tosylate which is also a good leaving group.

Quinones

Form by reacting a phenol with an oxidizing agent Named by indicating position of carbonyl numerically followed by quinone Ex. p-benzenediol (hydroquinone) + Na2Cr2O7, H2SO4 --> 1,4-benzoquinone (quinone) Resonance-stabilized electrophiles, most not aromatic (lack conjugated ring) Phylloquinone (Vitamin K1)

The _____________________ ___________, makes possible the installation of an alkyl group on an aromatic ring.

Friedel-Crafts alkylation

How do you get a disaccharide?

From the same reaction that gave us the glycoside! Its just that now the alcohol is.....ANOTHER MONOSACCHARIDE! YAY!

How what is Gabriel Synthesis for?

Gabriel drank ammonia! OH NO!

What is the only amino acid that is NOT CHIRAL?

Glycine

Gravity filtration vs vacuum filtration

Gravity filtration is used when the desired product is in solution (usually hot) whereas vacuum filtration has the desired product being a solid.

Mg, ether

Grignard reagent

Jones Reagent

H2CrO4 in H20, acetone primary alcohol---> acid (=O and OH) secondary alcohol---->ketone (=O) tertiary alcohol---> No reaction

what solutions does hydration of alkenes uses to drive equilibrium toward hydration?

H2SO4 or H3PO4

Alcohol--> haloalkanes

HX steps in and knocks off the alcohol (OH) group replacing it with a halide ( Cl,Br, and I) *F doesnt usually react *SN1 reactions will occur if tertiary *SN2 for primary

What are the reagents for Clemmensen Reduction?

Hg(Zn) and HCl

Catalytic Hydrogenation of Alkenes

Hydrogen(H2) can be added across the double in -only if a catalyst takes place (Pd,Pt or Ni catalyst)

Phenol

Hydroxyl groups attached to aromatic rings ~ Hydroxyl hydrogens of phenols are particularly acidic due to resonance within the phenol ring ~ Aromatic Alcohols

Quinones can be further oxidized to...

Hydroxyquinones

Reduction of acyl halide?

H₂ Pd/BaSO₄ Quinoline

What are the reagents for Wolff-Kishner Reduction of al and ke?

H₂NNH₂, then a base and heat.

Phylloquinone

Important example: used in photosynthesis and blood clotting

Bromination of Benzene

In the first step, the aromatic ring functions as a nucleophile and attacks the electrophilic agent, generating a positively charged intermediate called a sigma complex, or arenium ion, which is resonance stabilized. In the second step of the mechanism, the sigma complex is then deprotonated, thereby restoring aromaticity and regenerating the Lewis acid (FeBr3).

general mechanism for electrophilic aromatic substitution

In the first step,the aromatic ring functions as a nucleophile and attacks E+, forming an intermediate sigma complex In the second step, the sigma complex is deprotonated, restoring aromaticity

nitration of benzene

In the first step,the aromatic ring functions as a nucleophile, forming an intermediate sigma complex In the second step, the sigma complex is deprotonated, restoring aromaticity

sulfonation of benzene

In the first step,the aromatic ring functions as a nucleophile, forming an intermediate sigma complex In the second step, the sigma complex is deprotonated, restoring aromaticity The resulting anion is protonated

Aldol and E2

In what reactions is it important to have and alpha Hydrogen?

What is a better leaving group I or F?

Iodine

Column Chromatography

Ion Exchange Chromatography Size-Exclusion Chromatography Affinity Chromatography

How can you think of Lithium Aluminum Hydride?

It is like an H- nucleophile.

What doesn't a nucleophile play a role in the rate of an Sn1 reaction?

It is not involved in the rate-determining step...the formation of the carbocation.

What role does tosylate usually play in reactions?

It usually acts as a good leaving group and a good protecting group.

Why is a Sn2 reaction bimolecular?

Its rate-determining step is dependent on TWO species; both the substrate and the nucleophile.

Syn Hydroxylation of Alkenes: what 2 other reagents can you use instead of OsO4,H202?

KMnO4, -OH

What oxidizes an aldehyde and what do you get?

KMnO₄, CrO₃, Ag₂O, H₂O₂ and you get a carboxylic acid.

Secondary alcohols are oxidized to...

Ketones via PCC or any other stronger oxidizing agent

What reduces aldehydes and ketones?

LAH or NaBH₄

Do ethers boil at high or low temperatures?

Low...no H-bonding.

What is the most common used peroxyacid

MCPBA

formation of Halohydrin: What orientation does it have and what stereochemistry?

Markovnikov orientation anti sterochemistry

PCC is a...

Mild anhydrous oxidant

H2SO4

More substituted Alcohol from alkene

williams ether reaction

NaH reacts with 5 or 6 membered ring O- will react with the C before the halide kicking the halide off and forming a cyclo.

ROH react with thionyl bromide

OH is replaced by the Br SOBr2 in Pyridine or Triethyl amine (Et3N)

ROH react w/ thionyl chloride

OH is replaced by the Cl SOCl2 in Pyridine or Triethyl amine (Et3N)

The difference between oligo and polysaccharide?

Oligo is short poly is long.

Where do you start numbering a carbohydrate?

On the carbonyl end.

What is a conjugated protein?

One that gets part of their function from a prosthetic group.

NaBH4 "H+"

Only reacts with ketones (produce 2 alcohols) or aldehydes (produce 1 alcohols)

Syn Hydroxylation of Alkenes

OsO4, H2O2 - adds -OH to both sides of the double bond

How can you get ketones or aldehydes?

Oxidation of primary or secondary alcohols. Or ozonolysis of alkenes.

Primary alcohol w/ PBr3----> haloalkanes (Br)

PBr3 is attacked and loses a Br dibromophosphite is a good leaving group Br- that left the PBr3 attakcs the CH2 group to displace the dibromophosphite group

-OH is a...

Poor LG; needs to react to form a better LG (Mesylates and tosylates)

LiAlH4 "H+"

Produces 2 alcohol from ketone and 1 alcohol from aldehydes ethers and o-

ester

Product of carboxylic acid and alcohol in presence of acid

1,3-dicarbonyl compounds

Products of Claisen condensations

How can one make an anhydride?

React a carboxylic acid with a carboxylate salt or heat! to stabilize the carboxylic acid.

alcohol

Reagent needed for ester hydrolysis

Fractional distillation

Repeated distillations on inert objects like glass beads that help separate two liquids with boiling points less than 25 C apart.

Why are carboxylic acids that much more acidic?

Resonance stabilization of between the alcoholic oxygen and the carbonyl oxygen.

How do you get an acyl halide from a carboxylic acid?

SOCl₂

What level of structure is guided by hydrogen bonds for proteins?

Secondary structure resulting in α-helix and β-pleated sheets.

Hydroxyquinones

Share same ring and carbonyl backbone as quinones + addition of one or more -OH groups Naming: position of -OH groups is indicated by a number & total number of -OHs (if more than one) are indicated by a prefix (di-, tri-) with substituent name "hydroxy-" Contain EDGs which make them slightly less electrophilic Have biological activity (synthesis of meds)

Thin-Layer Chromatography

Silica gel is polar!!

With respect to optical activity, what do your end products of Sn1 and Sn2 reactions become?

Sn1 = racemic mixture (nucleophile can attack from either the top or the bottom of the planar carbocation), therefore loss of optical activity. Sn2 = inversion of configuration and remains optically active.

SOCl2, pyridine

Substitutes Cl for OH with inverted configuration. Cl is a good LG. Anti. Primary or secondary only.

SO3, H2SO4, heat

Sulfonation: ---SO3H

HgSO4, H2SO4, H2O

Terminal Alkyne -> Enol -> Ketone

What level of structure determines whether you have collagen or myoglobin?

Tertiary structure in that at this level you have the determination of fibrous vs globular proteins.

What happens in a Benedict's test?

Testing for the presence of a reducing sugar. Aldoses and ketose can be oxidized to carboxylic acids and therefore producing Cu₂O (red) from benedict's reagent (started with Cu(OH)₂

What happens in a Tollens' Test?

Testing for the presence of a reducing sugar. Aldoses and ketose can be oxidized to carboxylic acids and therefore reduce Ag+ in the Tollens' test to metallic silver (Ag+ to Ag)

What looses an H first in basic titration, the amino or carboxyl group?

The carboxyl group duh!

In gas chromatography what is the eluant and what is the stationary phase?

The eluant or mobile phase is a gas (He or N) and the stationary phase is the temperature-regulated column. Retention time: How long it took for each compound to travel through the column.

What is a wittig reaction and what is its goal?

The goal is to make CARBON-CARBON double bonds by converting aldehydes and ketones into alkenes.

The conversion of a carboxylic acid into ANYTHING depends on what?

The nucleophile!!

Why is temperature important in recrystallization?

The product needs to be soluble in high temps and insoluble in lower temperatures. IMPURITIES need to be soluble at all temperatures so that they stay in solution.

Why is rotation of the peptide bond limited?

There is resonance about the C-N bond giving it some double bond character.

What is a zwitterion and how does an amino acid look as such?

They are dipolar ions where each half neutralizes the other.

What is significant about the α hydrogens on a β-dicarboxylic acid?

They are very acidic due to stabalization!

Amino acids are amphoteric. Why?

They can act as an acid or a base. They have at least two dissociation constants (from H's on the n and c terminus)

What are anomers?

They differ only in the newly formed chiral carbon (after ring formation). Can be α vs β. Glucose the α anomer is trans and the β anomer is cis (both pointing up!)

Only primary alcohols can be oxidized to carboxylic acids. T/F?

True!

Naturally-occuring amino acids are L-enantiomers. T/F? Fischer projection?

True!! Fischer projections of amino acids have amino group to the left!

Can nitrogen-containing compounds be optically active?

Usually not because of nitrogen inversion but sometimes they can be isolated if the structure hinders inversion.

Menaquinones

Vitamin K2

resonance and hydrogen bonds

What makes enols more stable than ketones?

What is a cyanohydrin?

When al and ke react with HCN.

How do you get an acetal or ketal?

When an aldehyde or ketone reacts with two equivalents of alcohol. A hemiketal or hemiacetal you get from one equivalent of alcohol.

When might decarboxylation occur?

When carboxylic acids are heated, they may spontaneously loose a CO₂

What is zaitsev's rule?

When producing alkenes (usually from elimination reactions) there will be a major and minor product, the major one being the more subsituted and stable form.

When would distillation be favored over a separatory funnel?

When two liquids are miscible, the separatory funnel cannot be used therefore distillation is more ideal.

What is a wash?

When you are using the extraction to remove impurities rather than separate out the desired product.

Electron withdrawing vs donating...what do each do to a negative charge and acidity?

Withdrawing delocalize/stabillize the negative charge (spread it over the molecule) which increases acidity. Donating does the opposite.

Can nitrogen containing compounds form hydrogen bonds?

Yes, but the are not as strong as the hydrogen bond between H and oxygen! (Therefore lower boiling point).

What are the best conditions for an Sn2 reaction?

You must have a strong nucleophile for the backside attack (thats what she said) with no steric hindrance.

ozonolysis: what is the intermediate

a five-membrered ring intermediate called molozonide -this rearranges to form ozonide

Whats another word for ethyne?

acetylene

Br2, FeBr3

add Br to aromatic ring (halogenation); can also use Cl2 and FeCl3; EAS

H2SO4, NaBr

add bromine (enantiomers)

HBr, H2O2

add bromine (enantiomers)

NBS

adds Br

when and why do we do methyl shift

after protonation to produce the more stable teritary carbocation

Alcohol -----> Sulfonate

alcohol reacts with p- Toluenesulfonyl chloride in pyridine hydrogen from alcohol is removed and forms HCl O attaches to the S of the p-tc

H2, Raney Nickel

aldehyde to alcohol

Alcohol with H2SO4/heat 180 Degree celsius -->

alkene

ROH with metals

alkoxide is formed OH turns to O^- and metal attatches

acid-catalyzed opening of epoxides in alcohol: what does this reaction produce and what type of stereochemistry

alkoxy alcohol with an anti stereochemistry

O3, H2O

alkyne to carboxylic acid

amide with dilute acid, heat H3O+

amide —> amine

NaNO2, HCl, CuBr

amine —> aniline —> bromine replaces N2+

the addition of water to a double bond forms..

an alcohol

What is the oritentation of oxidation of alcohol? how does it add?

anti-markovnikov

aromatic ring + CH3COCl —> 1.AlCl3 2.H2O

aromatic ring with CH3CO group (ketone group)

formation of halohydrin: where does the water add

back-side attack

why is the peroxide effect not seen with HCl and HI? but only with HBr

because the reaction of alkyl radical with HCl or HI is strongly endothermic

Why is there no rearrangements in oxymercuration-demecuration?

because there is no carbocation intermediate

Stereochemistry of halogen additon: why does the nucelophile attack from the back side?

because this assures an anti sterochemistry of addition

Tertiary alcohols

cannot be oxidized

Although an alkyl halide is by itself, electrophilic, it is not sufficiently electrophilic to react with benzene. However, in the presence of a Lewis acid, such as aluminum trichloride, the alkyl halide is converted into a ____________ which is an excellent electrophile and is capable of reacting with benzene in an electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction

carbocation

Zn(Hg), HCl, heat

carbonyl to alkane. these same reagents are also used to reduce NO2 to NH2 = Clemmensen Reduction

synt hydroxylation of alkene: what is formed after the osmate ester is hydrolyzed?

cis-glycol and regenerate the OsO4

Ozonolysis

cleaves double bond in half and produces aldehydes and ketons

What are peroxyacids used for?

converting alkenes to epoxides

peroxides produces..

free radicals

oxymercuration reaction: how does water approachs the merurinium ion

from the side opposite the ring (anti addition)

syn hydroxylation of alkene: what is the end product of using KMnO4 and OH instead?

glycol and a brown precipitate of maganese dioxide, MnO2

what happens if a halogen is added in the presence of water?

halohydrin is formed

formation of halohydrin: what is the intermediate

halonium ion (a "ring")

In the free radical initiation how do the peroxide bond break?

homolytically to form the first radical

aldehyde or ketone to diol

hydration by H2O (nucleophile) with acid or base

H2SO4/H2O heat, NH4OH

hydrolysis

HCN, H3O+

hydrolysis of CN to COOH

base-catalyzed opening of epoxides: what attacks and opens the ring?

hydroxide ion

how does alkoxymercuration-demercuration occur?

if the nucleophile is an alcohol, ROH, instead of water, an ETHER is produced

What is it about HBr that allows it to form the anti-markovnikov product?

it has the right reactivity for Each step of the free-radical chain reaction to take place

What is jones reagent and what does it do?

it is CrO₃, H₂SO₄ in acetone and it oxidizes primary alcohols to carboxylic acids (STRONG!)

oxymercuration reaction: what is the intermediate

it's a 3-membered ring called the mercurinium ion

tautomers

keto and enol forms are examples of

pyridine with CH3COCl, SnCl4,-HCl

ketone adds

How are the electrons held in pi bonds?

loosely

What types of reactions can you do with HBr?

markovnikov or anti markovnikov if Peroxide is present

oxymercuration reaction: follows what rule

markovnikov's rule

what type of rule does hydration of alkenes follow?

markovnikov's rule

Formation of halohydrins: what type of additon

markovonikov -the X will add to the less subsitiuted carbon

When benzene is treated with a mixture of nitric acid and sulfuric acid, a ____________ reaction occurs in which nitrobenzene is formed.

nitration

HNO3, H2SO4

nitration of benzene (NO2)

Is there a way to convert primary and secondary alkyl halides into carboxylic acids? Sure!!

nitrile formation followed by acid or base catalyzed hydrolysis.

pyridine with HNO3, (CH3CO)2O

nitro group adds

pyridine with KNO3

nitro group adds

The nitration of benzene can be used to install a ________ group on an aromatic ring. Once on the ring, the nitro group can be reduced to give an ________ group (NH2).

nitro, amino

so pyridine undergo friedel-crafts.?

no

are the carbocation intermediates found in all of these reactions?

no only some

is the bromine test for unsaturation, used to test the presence of a double bond?

no, Decolorizing bromine is the chemical test for the presence of double bond

ROH and acid

nucleophile in formation of acetal/ketal from ald/ket (and what catalyst?)

ROH

nucleophile in formation of hemiacetal/ketal from ald/ket

water

nucleophile in hydration of ald/ket

hydride

nucleophile in reduction of ald/ket

pyridine with NaNH2 (100 degrees)

nucleophilic substitution reaction: amine group adds

Catalytic hydrogenation: how are the hydrogen and alkene absorbed

on the metal surface

amide with Br2 no catalyst needed

one bromine adds

Syn hydroxylation of alkenes: what intermediate is formed?

osmate ester

KMnO4, NaOH, heat, H3O+

oxidation (add O)

O3, DMS

oxidative cleavage

Phenol Acidity

pKa ~10 (low pKa; most acidic alcohol) Phenols are much more acidic than non-aromatic alcohols they are resonance stabilized; they can form salts with inorganic bases such as NaOH **Strong acids: high Ka and low pKa

PCC, CH2Cl2

primary alcohol to aldehyde secondary alcohol to ketone (oxidation - adding O)

Swern Oxidation

primary alcohol to aldehyde secondary alcohol to ketone tertiary no reaction similar to PCC

Reactions of Phenols

proceed similarly to reactions with alcohol; hydrogen of -OH group is particularly acidic because of resonance-stabilization

electrophilic aromatic substitution

reaction in which one of the aromatic protons is replaced by an electrophile, and the aromatic ring is preserved.

Zn/HgCl, EtOH

reduce ketone or aldehyde to alkane but not strong enough to reduce CA

1. H3O+, H2NNH2 2. KOH, heat

reduces ketone to alkane

1. Fe or Sn, HCl 2. NaOH

reduction

R-CN with LiAlH4, H2O

reduction of CN to CH2NH2

NaBH4, MeOH

reduction: aldehydes or Ketone to alcohol

NaOCH3

replace LG with OCH3

10% NaOH 350 degrees

replace X with OH

The reaction between benzene and SO3 is highly sensitive to the concentrations of the reagents and is, therefore, ____________.

reversible

Explain the steps of addition of HX to alkenes

step 1:protonation of the double bond -this step forms the most stable carbocation step 2: nucleophile attacks the carbocaion, form an alkyl halid

What is the orientation and stereochemistry of halogen additon

sterochemistry: anti additon Orientation:

When benzene is treated with fuming sulfuric acid, a __________ reaction occurs and benzene- sulfonic acid is obtained.

sulfonation

Catalytic hydrogenation: what type of stereochemistry do they have?

syn stereochemistry since both hydrogen will add to the same side of the double bond

Sia2BH, H2O2, NaOH

terminal alkyne to aldehyde

base

the aldol reaction is catalysed by..

during halogen addition to alkenes, where does the second x- attack from

the back side

during halogen additon to alkenes, what type of intermediate does it form?

the intermediate is a 3-membrered ring called halonium ion

when bromine adds to the double bond what type of radical does it form

the most stable radical possible

enol and keto

the two structural isomers formed by aldehydes and ketones in solution

How do radical add to the a double bond? (to form what)

to give them the most stable radical in the intermediatw

In markovinkov's rule how does the proton add?

to the less subsituted end of the double, so the postive charge appears at the more subsitituted end (most stable carbocation)

During addition of halogens what does Cl2 and Br2,I2 add to the double bond to form? -What type of addition does it form

vicinal dihalide -this is an anti addition of halides

Formation of Halohydrins: what is the nucleophile?

water

acid

what catalyst in ester hydrolysis allows the reaction be be reversible?

a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound

what is ethyl acetoacetate an example of?

enol

what is more stable: the enol or keto form?

reaction between two esters

what is the Claisen condensation

the carboxylate anion is resonance stabilised

why is base-induced ester hydrolysis irreversible?

Primary Alcohols oxidized to....

~ Aldehydes via Pyridinium Chlorochromate (PCC) ~ Other oxidizing agents hydrate the alcohol and form carboxylic acid ex. Chromium(VI), Na2Cr2O7, K2Cr2O7

Alcohols are capable of...

~ Intermolecular hydrogen bonding ~ Higher MP and BP (more hydroxyls means higher MP/BP) and increased solubility in H2O

Naming

~ Replace "-e" with "-ol" ~ Common name: name alkyl as a derivative + alcohol (ex. ethyl alcohol) ~ Not highest priority: use prefix "hydroxy-"

Quinones

~ Treatment of phenols with OA ~ Indicate position of carbonyls numerically and ad quinone to parent phenol


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