Carbonyl Chemistry Flashcards
Explain the stereochemistry of an sn2 rxn
backside attack leads to inversion of stereo-chem
what kind of solvent does sn2 rxns prefer? list examples.
polar aprotic solvents (non-H-bonding)
e.g. DMSO, DMF, and acetone
what substrates and nucleophiles are preferred by sn2 rxns?
since backside attack occurs, we need reduced steric hindrance –> primary substrates are better
to reduce hindrance, we want small (non-bulky) and strong nucleophiles (e.g. basic ones)
explain the stereochemistry of sn1 rxns
the first step of sn1 creates a planar carbocation. Thus, the nucleophile can attack from top or bottom creating a 50/50 racemate
what kind of solvent does sn1 rxns prefer? list examples.
polar protic solvents which stabilize the carbocation. they can also perform solvolysis in which the solvent acts as the nucleophile
e.g. H2O, NH3, alcohols
what are the most stable substrates for sn1 rxns? what nucleophiles are preferred?
since carbocations are most stable with more subs, we need a highly substituted substrate. therefore tertiary is most preferred.
nucleophile is normally a weak, non-basic Nu (since the carbocation is a strong electrophile
what is the rate of an sn1 rxn dependent on?
only the electrophile since it must lose its LG first before being attacked.
what is a rearrangement? sn1/sn2?
rearrangement occurs when a carbocation can become more stable by switching to a different carbon –> only for sn1 though.
aldehydes and ketones: what is PCC used for?
to oxidize primary alcohols to aldehydes without over-oxidizing them to carboxylic acids
aldehydes and ketones: what is CrO3, H2CRO4, MnO4 used for?
to oxidize secondary alcohols to ketones
aldehydes and ketones: what reagent is used to oxidize tertiary alcohols to carbonyl structures?
none! –> tertiary alcohols have no H on their carbon to give up in oxidation
aldehydes and ketones: the hydrogens on the carbons next to the carbonyl carbon are said to be acidic. (CH3COOH). What is an enolate ion / what forms it.
In the presence of a strong base (OH or RO-), an alpha proton can be abstracted from a carbonyl compound leaving a carbanion that delocalizes the electron into the conjugated system. This is now an enolate anion which itself can now act as a NUCLEOPHILE due to its carbanion character (check notes for diagram)
aldehydes and ketones: what is an enol?
what it sounds like —> an alkene (double bond) next to and alcoh(ol)
aldehydes and ketones: how is an enol formed?
First, the enolate ion is formed where a base removes an acidic hydrogen. Then, the O- is protonated to form an alcohol!
aldehydes and ketones: what is keto-enol tautomerism
tautomerism is when isomers (in this case, constitutional) exist in equilibrium. thus, when a ketone is in equilibrium with an enol.
tautomerism can cause racemate formation
Why are sodium borohydride / NABH4 and lithium aluminum hydride / LiAlH4 important molecules ?
NABH4 and LiAlH4 are strong REDUCING AGENTS (i.e. they get oxidized)
they provide a hydride (a proton + electrons) which is evident since they have hydrogens bonded to elements with low EN (B and Al)
aldehydes and ketones: what occurs when sodium borohydride is mixed with an aldehyde?
NaBH4 is a strong reducing agent –> thus, it must reduce the aldehyde to an alcohol
aldehydes and ketones: to make a primary alcohol we need to?
reduce an aldehyde (e.g. with NaBH4 or LiAlH4)
aldehydes and ketones: to make a secondary alcohol we need to?
reduce a ketone (e.g. with NaBH4 or LiAlH4)
Organometallic reagents: what are these?
these are very strong nucleophiles AND bases. they are an R group attached to M+X-
e.g. CH3CH2MgBr
the metal between the halide and the R group causes the R group to become quite negative.
Organometallic reagents: how are they formed?
we simply react an alkyl halide (R-X) with a metal such as Mg in an aprotic solvent.
once we have formed an organometallic reagent (CH3CH2MgBr), what can we use it for?
organometallic reagents are strong nucleophiles and bases. They are used in nucleophilic addition to add more carbons to a molecule!!
check digram in notes
why cant organometallic reagents be used when the carbonyl group is a carboxylic acid?
they will deprotonate the acidic hydrogen instead of acting as a Nu.
how can we prevent an alcohol substituent in a carbonyl compound from undergoing an acid/base rxn with a organometallic reagent? What is used specifically?
we first use a protecting group which sequesters the acidic proton. These can be done with tosylates or mesylates
this can be done form amine groups too (NH2)
t or f, mesylate and tosylate are bad LG’s
false, they are good leaving groups!
what are acetals and hemiacetals?
Acetal - carbon with two OR groups attached and two R groups attached (R can be anything)
Hemiacetal - carbon with one OH and one OR attached. Plus two R groups attached (R can be anything)
Acetals are made from ketones and aldehydes. What rxn occurs to do this? (3 general steps)
in general: ketone reacts with alcohol in acid
- acid protonates the carbonyl oxygen
- alcohol attacks creating the OR group (and the double bond shifts up to the oxygen creating the -OH group)
- hemiacetal - this is repeated to form an acetal