Polymers And Life Flashcards
Acid Hydrolysis of Esters
ROOR’ + H2O ROOH + OHR’
Ester + Water Carboxylic Acid + Alcohol
Reflux ester with excess water and dilute acid catalyst (sulfuric)
Reversible
Alkali Hydrolysis of Esters
Ester + Alkali/base —> Carboxylate salt + alcohol
Reflux with dilute Alkali
Non reversible and goes to completion
preferred
Acid Hydrolysis of Amides
1° amide + Water —> Carboxylic Acid + ammonium salt
- forms ammonia —-> ammonium with acid
2° amide + water —> Carboxylic Acid + 1°amine salt
Heat with mod conc. sulfuric or hydrochloric acid
CN bond broken
Alkaline Hydrolysis of Amides
1° amide + Alkali —-> Carboxylate ion + ammonia gas
2° amide + Alkali —> Carboxylate ion + amine
Heated with mod conc. Alkali (normally NaOH)
Differences between addition and condensation polymerisation
Reaction- addition reaction vs condensation reaction (form amide or ester link)
Monomer- addition tends to be unsaturated, condensation need two functional groups
Reactivity- addition has unreactive polymer chain, condensation has links that can be hydrolysed
Acidic nature of Carboxylic acids
Weak acids. Partially dissociate into Carboxylate ions and H+ ions in water (position of equilibrium to left)
Carboxylic acid + metal —> salt + hydrogen
– heat under reflux
Carboxylic acid + carbonate —> salt + CO2 + H2O
– fizzes