Esters Flashcards

1
Q

Preparation

A

Produced by the reaction of a carboxylic acid with an alcohol and sulfuric acid catalyst (esterification), Ester is isolated from mixture using distillation, equilibrium reaction, K value is close to 1

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2
Q

Melting and boiling point

A

Most esters are liquids at room temperature, Lower than alcohols and carboxylic acids of similar molecular mass (removes consideration of dispersion forces) as esters can’t form hydrogen bonds, Higher than alkanes of similar size

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3
Q

Solubility in water

A

Small esters are soluble in water, As size of the ester increases, solubility decreases as it can’t form hydrogen bonds, Most esters are insoluble in water

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4
Q

Solubility in organic solvents

A

Most esters are soluble in organic solvents as they can form dispersion forces, As size increases, solubility increases
Esters are powerful solvents

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5
Q

Reactions

A

Undergo combustion, In acidic conditions, undergo hydrolysis to reform the carboxylic acid and alcohol (original reactants), In basic conditions, forms a salt of carboxylic acid and alcohol (occurs in two steps and reaction goes to completion, important for soap production)

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6
Q

Biodiesel

A

Biofuel, Made from biomass- plant or animal oils (plant oils), Usually methyl or ethyl esters, Dominant IMF of dispersion forces, Carbon neutral, Renewable, Only 7% of worlds diesel requirements are met from biodiesel, Australia consumes 400 ML biodiesel and the rest is petrodiesel (23 000 ML)

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7
Q

Why are straight-chain esters better

A

More biodegradable

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8
Q

Acid catalysed esterification with alcohol

A

Least used method, Conversion of a long chain fatty acid to a methyl or ethyl ester using acid catalyst, Produces a non-volatile ester, CH3(CH2)18COOH + CH3OH –H2SO4–> CH3(CH2)18COOCH3 + H2O

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9
Q

Conversion of oils to fatty acids and then alkyl esters via acid catalysis

A

Not very popular, preferred, Hydrolysis of an oil (ester) to a fatty acid, Conversion to a methyl or ethyl ester via acid catalysis (esterification)

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10
Q

Base catalysed transesterification with alcohol

A

Predominant method of biodiesel, Uses raw material of vegetable oil from sources such as soya bean, canola or palm oil, Recycled vegetable oil or animal fats can be used, Reaction goes to completion, R’OH (commonly methanol) is in excess about 6:1 giving a 98% conversion, Occurs at 60 degrees so that everything is liquid (methanol boils at 64 degrees), R’OH + RCOOR’’ –base (KOH/NaOH)–> R’‘OH + RCOOR’

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11
Q

Saponification

A

Base hydrolysis of an ester (triglycerides), Fats and oils are naturally occurring esters based on the alcohol glycerol and 3 long chains of saturated and/or unsaturated carboxylic acids known as fatty acids

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12
Q

How are soaps made

A

Fat or oil is boiled with a strong base (need 3 moles to break 3 ester bonds) such as sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide, each ester linkage is split to give a salt of a fatty acid and glycerol

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13
Q

Limitations of soap

A

Surfactant (surface acting agent) which works by making dirt and grease soluble in water, Limited effectiveness in hard water as it precipitates and forms scum with calcium and magnesium ions, In hard water: poorly washed clothes, blocked drains, grey scum in wash tubs, stains around basins and taps

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14
Q

Detergents

A

Soapless cleaning agents, Work in hard water, Work similarly to soaps

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15
Q

Manufacturing detergents

A

Make alkylbenzene sulfonic acid from an alkylbenzene, Alkylbenzene sulfonic acid is neutralised with sodium hydroxide producing sodium alkylbenzene sulfonate

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16
Q

How do soaps and detergents work

A

Makes grease, dirt and oil soluble in water due to the strong dispersion forces (non-polar, hydrophobic group), Hydrophilic group (polar) is soluble in water, Non-polar tail for soap must be between 14-20 carbons- if too short loses structure, if too long won’t dissolve

17
Q

Cleaning action steps (4)

A

Dissolving the surfactant ion in water- Soap/detergent dissociates in water, Orientation- Non-polar (hydrophobic) tail dissolves in the oil/grease and the hydrophilic head dissolves in water, Agitation- lifts the oil of the fabric and creates micelles (globule of oil), Rinsing- Oil/grease is now soluble in water and is no rinsed away (washes micelles away)