Topic 17: Carbonyl Compounds Flashcards

1
Q

What is the aldehyde functional group?

A

At the end of the end of the chain:
R-C(=O)H

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1
Q

What are carbonyl compounds?

A

Aldehydes and ketones

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2
Q

What is the ketone functional group?

A

In the middle of the chain:
R - C(=O) - R

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3
Q

What are the intermolecular forces on a carbonyl?

A

There is a dipole formed as the oxygen is more electronegative than carbon, so the oxygen has a partial -ve charge and carbon a partial +ve charge

This means they have:
–> london forces
–> permanent dipole interactions
–> there are no polar bonds that result in a +ve H for H-bonding –> lower boiling points and melting points than corresponding alcohol

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4
Q

Can carbonyls form hydrogen bonds?

A

Yes - the lone pairs on their oxygen means they can hydrogen bond to water
—> thus smaller ketones and aldehydes will dissolve in water

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5
Q

Why cant a large carbonyl compound bond with water?

A
  • strength of the potential hydrogen bonding of the carbonyl with water must be higher than the combined strength of the intermolecular forces of the carbonyl and the hydrogen bonding of water
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6
Q

What is the reaction between aldehydes and acidified potassium dichromate?

A

Aldehydes can be oxidised to form carboxylic acids

Aldehyde + [O] –> Carboxylic acid
[O] = K2Cr2O7

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7
Q

What is the reaction between ketones and acidified potassium dichromate?

A

There is no reaction: This is because ketones do not have a readily available hydrogen atom, like aldehydes do

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8
Q

What is the positive test for an aldehyde when reacted with K2Cr2O7?

A

The aldehyde would be oxidised, and you would see an orange to green colour change

–> If a ketone is present there would be no colour change

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9
Q

What happens when an aldehyde is reacted with tollens reagent?

A

If gently warmed with Tollens’ reagent, an aldehyde will become oxidised

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10
Q

What is a positive test for an aldehyde with Tollens reagent?

A

A silver mirror is formed:
As the aldehyde is oxidised, it causes the Ag+ ions to become reduced to solid metallic silver, Ag

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11
Q

What happens if a ketone is warmed with Tollens reagent?

A

There is no reaction, as ketones cannot be oxidised

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12
Q

What happens when an aldehyde is reacted with Fehling’s / Benedict’s solution?

A

The aldehyde is oxidised, and the Cu2+ ions in the Fehling’s solution are reduced to Cu+ ions which forms a brick-red precipitate

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13
Q

What is a positive test for an aldehyde in Fehling’s solution?

A

Colour change from Blue to brick-red as the aldehyde is oxidised

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14
Q

What are aldehydes reduced to?

A

Primary alcohols

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15
Q

What are ketones reduced to?

A

Secondary alcohols

16
Q

How are carbonyls reduced?

A

In LiAlH4, in dry ether
The LiAlH4 provides H- nucleophile which reduced the carbonyl group

17
Q

What is the general equation for the reduction of an aldehyde?

A

C(H)=O + 2[H] –> CRH2OH

18
Q

What is the general equation for the reduction of a ketone?

A

C(H)=O + 2[H] –> CR2HOH

19
Q

What type of reaction is it that carbonyls undergo?

A

Nucleophilic substitution
2 step process

20
Q

What happens if a carbonyl is reacted with HCN

A
  1. the cyanide ion attacks the carbonyl carbon to form a negatively charged intermediate
  2. 2, the negatively charged oxygen atom in the reactive intermediate quickly reacts with aqueous H+ (either from HCN, water or dilute acid) to form 2-hydroxynitrile compounds,
21
Q

What conditions are required for the reaction between a carbonyl and HCN

A

The presence of KCN

22
Q

Why is the reaction with HCN important?

A

It increases chain length
Produces hydroxynitriles

23
Q

What is 2,4DNPH?

A

a reagent which detects the presence of carbonyl compounds

24
Q

How does the reaction with 2,4 DNPH work?

A

The carbonyl group of aldehydes and ketones undergoes a condensation reaction with 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine

25
Q

What is a positive test for a carbonyl with 2,4 DNPH?

A

a deep-orange precipitate forms (it can be purified by recrystallisation)

26
Q

How can you determine whether the orange precipitate from the 2,4 DNPH is from a ketone or an aldehyde?

A

Measure the melting point to determine whether it is an aldehyde or ketone

27
Q

What does the iodoform test identify?

A

Methyl ketones
CH3CO- group e.g. ethanal

28
Q

What is the positive result for the iodoform test?

A

formation of a yellow precipitate

29
Q

What happens during the iodoform test?

A
  1. The reagent is heated with an alkaline solution of iodine
  2. This reaction involves a halogenation and hydrolysis step
  3. In the halogenation step, all three H-atoms in the -CH3 (methyl) group are replaced with iodine atoms, forming a -CI3 group
  4. The intermediate compound is hydrolysed by an alkaline solution to form a sodium salt (RCO2 - Na+) and a yellow precipitate of CHI3
30
Q

What other compound will react with iodoform and give a positive test?

A
  • All methyl secondary alcohols (such as hexan-2-ol) and the primary alcohol ethanol
  • Iodine in sodium hydroxide reacts to form iodate(I) ions which will oxidise the secondary alcohols to ketones