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Aldehyde & Ketone Reactions

Aldehyde & Ketone

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Aldehyde & Ketone. Reactions. Formation of an Aldehyde Oxidation of Primary Alcohols. General equation: Primary alcohol aldehyde RCH 2 CH=O EXAMPLE: 1-propanol. Formation of a Ketone Oxidation of Secondary Alcohols. General equation: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Aldehyde & Ketone

Aldehyde & Ketone

Reactions

Page 2: Aldehyde & Ketone

Formation of an AldehydeOxidation of Primary Alcohols

• General equation:– Primary alcohol aldehyde

RCH2CH=O

EXAMPLE:1-propanol

Page 3: Aldehyde & Ketone

Formation of a KetoneOxidation of Secondary Alcohols

• General equation:– Secondary alcohol ketone

O R-C-R

EXAMPLE:2-propanol

CO

RH

R

H[O ]

Page 4: Aldehyde & Ketone

Review from Chapter 13!!Oxidation of Tertiary Alcohols

• General equation:– Tertiary alcohol NO REACTION!!!

Page 5: Aldehyde & Ketone

YOU TRY THESE!

• Write an equation showing the oxidation of the following alcohols. Be sure to name the product formed.

(a) 1-pentanol

(b) 2-butanol

Page 6: Aldehyde & Ketone

Oxidation of Aldehydes

• Aldehydes are easily oxidized further to form carboxylic acids.

• Oxidation process:Primary alcohol Aldehyde Carboxylic acid1-butanol

2-methyl-1-propanol

[O ] [O ]

[O ] [O ]

Page 7: Aldehyde & Ketone

Reduction Reactions

• Both aldehydes and ketones are easily reduced back to the corresponding alcohol. This process is called hydrogenation.

O

R1 R2

+H

HH

R2R1

OHCatalyst

Page 8: Aldehyde & Ketone

Reduction ReactionsPractice Problems

• Reduce 3-pentanone (ketone 2o alcohol)

• Reduce hexanal (aldehyde 1o alcohol)

Page 9: Aldehyde & Ketone

HOMEWORK

Oxidation and Reduction Reactions

p 419 #41, 42, 45, 57, 60 & 68 (a, c, & d)

p 410 # 13 – 16 (a, c, & d)

Page 10: Aldehyde & Ketone

Lab Tests for Aldehydes and Ketones

Tollen’s Test•Tests for ALDEHYDES (not ketones)•Silver ion is reduced to silver metal•The aldehyde is oxidized to a carboxylic acid anion•AKA the Silver Mirror Test

Page 11: Aldehyde & Ketone

Tollen’s Test

O OR-CH + Ag(NH3)2

+ R-C-O- + Ag0

Aldehyde silver ammonia carboxylic silver complex acid anion metal

“Tollen’s Reagent” mirror

Page 12: Aldehyde & Ketone

Write equations for the following reactions

1. ethanal + Tollen’s reagent

2. 2- pentanone + Tollen’s reagent

3. propanal + Tollen’s reagent

Page 13: Aldehyde & Ketone

Benedict’s Test Indicates the presence of an aldehyde

A buffered aqueous solution of copper (II) hydroxide and sodium citrate

Reacts to oxidize aldehydes

Forms a red solid – Cu2O

Page 14: Aldehyde & Ketone

Benedict’s TestAll sugars are aldehydes or ketones

Benedict’s solution can be used to test urine for glucose (an aldehyde), which is common in uncontrolled diabetes

The amount of red precipitate formed is directly proportional to the amount of glucose in the urine.

Page 15: Aldehyde & Ketone

Benedict’s Test

O OH OH H H HC – C - C - C - C - CH2OH + 2Cu+2

H H OH OH (from Benedict’s Solution)

O OH OH H H-O - C - C - C - C - C -CH2OH + Cu2O H H OH OH red precipitate

Page 16: Aldehyde & Ketone

HOMEWORK

p 419 #14.46, 47, & 48

Page 17: Aldehyde & Ketone

Addition ReactionsI. Addition of an Alcohol to an Aldehyde – Acetal formation O H H+ OH HR1-C-H + O-R2 R1-C-OR2 + O-R2

HAldehyde alcohol Hemiacetal (quite reactive)

OR2

H+ R1-C-OR2 + H2O

HAcetal

Page 18: Aldehyde & Ketone

Addition Reactions

• -OR group is an alkoxyl group

• Hemiacetals are very reactive, so in the presence of acid and excess alcohol, will continue to react to form an acetal

Page 19: Aldehyde & Ketone

Addition Reactions

2. Addition of an alcohol to a ketone – KETAL formationO H OH H

R1-C-R2 + O-R3 H+ R1-C-OR3 + OR3

R2

Ketone alcohol Hemiketal

OR3

H+ R1-C-OR3 + H2O

R2

Ketal

Page 20: Aldehyde & Ketone

Practice Problems

• Propanal + Methanol

• 3-hexanone + ethanol

Page 21: Aldehyde & Ketone

HOMEWORK

p 419#49-56

Page 22: Aldehyde & Ketone

Keto-Enol Tautomers

• Many aldehydes & ketones exist in a mixture of two constitutional isomers, informally referred to as tautomers.R

1

R2

R3

O R1

R2

R3

OH

Keto form Enol form

Page 23: Aldehyde & Ketone

Keto-Enol Tautomers

• constitutional = structural

• They differ in the placement of a hydrogen atom & a double bond

• The “keto” form is more stable

Page 24: Aldehyde & Ketone

Practice• Draw the enol form of the aldehydes and

ketones listed below.– Ethanal

– 2-pentanone

– Butanal

Page 25: Aldehyde & Ketone

Aldol Condensation• Reaction in which aldehydes & ketones react to

form larger molecules. A new carbon-carbon bond is formed in the process.

• Actually occurs between an aldehyde in the keto form and one in the enol form.

• Used in our cells to make glucose “gluconeogenesis”

R1

OR

2O

+O H - o r

e n z ym eR

1

OH O

R2

Aldehyde Aldehyde Aldol

Page 26: Aldehyde & Ketone

Aldol Condensation

• The new carbon-carbon bond forms between the carbonyl carbon of one molecule and the α-carbon (the carbon next to the carbonyl carbon) of the other

O O• CH3CH + CH3CH

Page 27: Aldehyde & Ketone

Example• Write an equation for the aldol condensation of

two molecules of butanal.

O OH+OH O

Butanal Butanal (enol form)3

-hydroxy

-2

-ethylhexanal

Page 28: Aldehyde & Ketone

More PracticeTry these:

• The aldol condensation of 2 molecules of :propanone

butanone

Page 29: Aldehyde & Ketone

HOMEWORK

p 419-420#62, 63, & 64