A - Carboxylic Acids Flashcards
What functional group do carboxylic acids contain?
The carboxyl group -COOH.
What two functional groups make up the carboxyl group?
A carbonyl group -C=O and a hydroxyl group -OH.
When is the carboxyl group found in a carboxylic acid?
Only ever at the end of the carbon chain.
What is the suffix for carboxylic acids?
-oic acid.
How are the carbons numbered in a carboxylic acid?
The carbon in the carboxyl group is counted as carbon one.
How are carboxylic acids named when the carboxyl group is attached to a benzene ring?
The suffix -carboxylic acid is used and the carbon of the functional group is not counted as part if the root.
Are carboxylic acids strong or weak?
Weak acids.
What happens when carboxylic acids are dissolved in water?
They partially dissociate into a carboxylate ion and an H+ ion. This sets up an equilibrium which lies to the left as most of the molecules don’t dissociate.
What happens when carboxylic acids react with carbonates?
They liberate CO2.
The other products are a salt and water.
Carbon dioxide fizzes out of the solution in these reactions.
How are esters formed from carboxylic acids?
What is this type of reaction called?
Carboxylic acids and alcohols react, in the presence if an acid catalyst to give esters.
Called an esterification reaction.
What are esters?
Organic compounds that contain a -COO- group. An alkyl or aryl group replaces the H from the hydroxyl group on the carboxylic acid it is derived from.
How are esters named?
The names of esters are based on the name pf the parent acid. Esters from ethanoic acid are called ethanoates, those from methanoic acid are called methanoates and so on.
But the name of the ester always starts with the alkyl or aryl group that has replaced the H of the acid.
For example:
Methyl ethanoate or ethyl methanoate.
What else is produced in the reaction producing esters from carboxylic acids and alcohols? What type of reaction is it also therefore called?
Water.
Condensation reaction.
How are the carbons numbered in esters?
The carbons in the C-O-C are both numbered 1 and the carbons in their respective chains are numbered from there.
Give some common uses of esters.
- Esters have a sweet smell so are used in perfumes.
- Used by the food industry to flavour drinks and sweets.
- Esters are polar liquids so lots of polar organic compounds will dissolve in them. This makes them good solvents in glued and printing inks.
- Used as plasticisers - they’re added to plastics during polymerisation to make the plastic more flexible. (But over time, the plasticiser molecules escape and the plastic can become brittle and stiff).
Vegetable oils and animal fats are esters of what?
Propane-1,2,3-triol (glycerol).
What are fatty acids?
Long chain carboxylic acids.
What do fatty acids combine with to make esters?
Glycerol (propane-1,2,3-triol)
What is it that gives fats and oils most of their properties and why?
The fatty acid chains as these make up the majority of the molecules.
Describe the structure and melting point of animal fats.
They have mainly saturated hydrocarbon fatty acid chains.
They fit neatly together, increasing the VDWs forces between them.
This means you need higher temperatures to melt them and they’re solid at room temperature.
Describe the structure and melting point of vegetable oils.
They have unsaturated hydrocarbon chains. The double bonds mean that the chains are bent and don’t pack together well, decreasing VDWs forces.
They’re easier to melt than animal fats and are liquids at room temperature.
What is hydrolysis?
When a substance is split up by water.
Esters are hydrolysed to what?
Alcohols and either carboxylic acids or salts of carboxylic acids.
What are the two types of hydrolysis of esters? Why do they exist?
- Acid hydrolysis.
- Base hydrolysis.
Just using water for this reaction is often very slow so an acid or alkali is used to speed it up.