Paper 9: ORGANIC CHEMISTRY-III (Reaction Mechanism-2) Module17: Reduction by Metal hydrides Part-II CHEMISTRY

Similar documents
Alehydes, Ketones and Carboxylic Acid

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives Reading Study Problems Key Concepts and Skills Lecture Topics: Structures and reactivity of carboxylic acid derivatives

Chapter 10. Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives. Naming Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives. Carboxylic Acids: RCOOH (RCO 2 H)

Esters of Carboxylic Acids These are derivatives of carboxylic acids where the hydroxyl group is replaced by an alkoxy group.

Carboxylic Acids and their Derivatives I

Loudon Chapter 21 Review: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives Jacquie Richardson, CU Boulder Last updated 3/20/2018

Lecture 20. Herman Emil Fischer Nobel Prize 1902 Sugars, Esters and Purines. April 4, Chemistry 328N

Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry CHEM 109 For Students of Health Colleges Credit hrs.: (2+1)

Chapter 20: Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles شیمی آلی 2

Carboxylic Acids. The Importance of Carboxylic Acids (RCO 2 H)

10. CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES 10.1 Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acids 10.2 Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids 10.

CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES: NUCLEOPHILIC ADDITION-ELIMINATION AT THE ACYL CARBON

Ch 21 Carboxylic Acid Derivatives and Nu Acyl Subst n

Chapter 19: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution 19.1: Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives (please read)

Chapter 18. Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition-Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

Chapter 20 Carboxylic Acids. Introduction

Identifying Functional Groups. (Chapter 2 in the Klein text)

Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles. Chapters 20, 21 Organic Chemistry, 8th Edition John McMurry

Chapter 18 Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition- Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

Functional Derivatives of Carboxylic Acids

1/3/2011. Chapter 17 Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Nucleophilic Addition- Elimination at the Acyl Carbon

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution

Physical properties: C L = L. Cl, NH 2, OCH 3, OH, OCR O O O NH 2 CH 3 N(CH 3 ) 2. Sol. in H 2 O

Carboxylic Acids and Carboxylic Acid Deriva3ves. Nucleophilic Acyl Subs0tu0on (Addi0on- Elimina0on)

13. Carboxylic Acids (text )

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Reactions

Chem 263 Nov 26, 2013 O R' alkyl. acid. ethyl. acetic acid. ethyl acetate ethyl ethanoate

Chapter 20: Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution

Chapters 13/14: Carboxylic Acids and Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

R O R' Acid anhydride. Acid halide. Carboxylic acid. Ester O O O O. Nitrile Acyl phosphate Thioester. Amide

Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives. Chapter 17. Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives

REACTIONS OF CARBOXYLIC ACID DERIVATIVES WITH NUCLEOPHILES A. Reactions of Acid Chlorides with Nucleophiles

3/27/2011. Chapter 8 Reactions of Alkenes and Alkynes. Alkene Addition Reactions. 8.1 Preparing Alkenes: A Preview of Elimination Reactions

Chapter 15 Alcohols, Diols, and Thiols

DERIVATIVES OF CARBOXYLIC ACIDS

Chapter 21 The Chemistry of Carboxylic Acid Deriva7ves

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

Chapter 15. Alcohols, Diols, and Thiols. B. Sources: there are two principal sources of simple aliphatic alcohols

This is an addition reaction. (Other types of reaction have been substitution and elimination). Addition reactions are typically exothermic.

ORGANIC SYNTHESIS VIA ENOLATES

Diverse Reactions of Alkenes

Carboxylic Acids and Esters

H O. rapidly reduces. They dissolve. because they can hydrogen bond to the water molecules.

Esterification. Preparation of β-d-glucose pentaacetate. Dr. Zerong Wang at UHCL. Table of contents

Lecture Notes Chemistry Mukund P. Sibi Lecture 31 Reactions at the Alpha-Carbon of Carbonyl Compounds

Oregon State University

Carboxylic Acids, Esters and Acyl Chlorides

EXPERIMENT 8 (Organic Chemistry II) Carboxylic Acids Reactions and Derivatives

Ch. 21: CARBOXYLIC ACID DERIVATIVES AND NUCLEOPHILIC ACYL SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives:

Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives

Organic Chemistry. Chapter 23. Hill, Petrucci, McCreary & Perry 4 th. Ed. Alkane to Substituent Group methane CH 4 methyl CH 3

Carboxylic acid derivatives

Chemistry 1120 Exam 1 Study Guide

Alkenes are very useful in syntheses -they allow us to convert into many of the other types of functional groups.

Chap 7: Alcohols, Phenols, & Thiols

Alcohol aldehydes cetones and carboxylic acids

Chem 263 B6 Notes March 30, 2006 Demo-In-Class: O

Infrared Spectroscopy

Alcohols and Ethers. Alcohols

Nu: - Addition or Nu: - Acyl Substitution?

Name the ester produced when methanol and pentanoic acid react. methyl pentanoate. Name the type of reaction used to make an ester

Carboxylic Acids. Carboxylic acid groups are always terminal groups with a carbonyl carbon also bound to a hydroxyl For example:

Lecture 19. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Y - + X - Y X R C X. April 2, Chemistry 328N

where R doesn t have to equal R or R

Prelab 6: Carboxylic Acids

Chapter 21. Carboxylic Acid Derivatives. and Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution. Reactions. - many carboxylic acid derivatives are known:

ESTERS AND RELATED CARBOXYLIC ACID DERIVATIVES. Jack DeRuiter

Bio 100 Serine Proteases 9/26/11

IR Spectroscopy Part II

Carbon s unique bonding pattern arises from the hybridization of the electrons.

1-To know what is protein 2-To identify Types of protein 3- To Know amino acids 4- To be differentiate between essential and nonessential amino acids

PAPER No. : 16 Bioorganic and biophysical chemistry MODULE No. : 25 Coenzyme-I Coenzyme A, TPP, B12 and biotin

6/9/2015. Unit 15: Organic Chemistry Lesson 15.2: Substituted Hydrocarbons & Functional Groups

Chapter 16 and GHW#6 Questions. Carboxylic Acids, Esters, and Other Acid Derivatives

Lecture'11:'February'21,'2013 Reac&ons*of*Deriva&ves*( )

Carbonyl Chemistry VI + C O C. 1pm In Geology Room 112. Exam is Monday 11am-1pm. Chemistry /06/02

General Chemistry. Ch. 10

Radicals. Structure and Stability of Radicals. Radicals are formed from covalent bonds by adding energy in the form of heat (Δ) or light (hν).

Topic 4.5 COMPOUNDS CONTAINING THE CARBONYL GROUP. Aldehydes and Ketones Carboxylic Acids and their Salts Esters Acyl Chlorides and Acid Anhydrides

Polar bodies are either introduced or unmasked, which results in more polar metabolites Phase I reactions can lead either to activation or

For example, monosaccharides such as glucose are polar and soluble in water, whereas lipids are nonpolar and insoluble in water.

Chapter 8 Lecture Reactions of Alkenes

MITOCW watch?v=xms9dyhqhi0

H 3 C OCH 3 3 C N(CH 3 ) 2 H 3 C H H 3 C CH 3. ketone. pk a = 9 H H. 1,3-keto ester pk a = 11

For questions 1-4, match the carbohydrate with its size/functional group name:

Factors to Consider in the Study of Biomolecules

ORGANIC AND BIOORGANIC CHEMISTRY

Chemistry B11 Chapters 14 Amines, aldehydes, ketones and carboxylic acids

PAPER No. : 16, Bioorganic and biophysical chemistry MODULE No. : 22, Mechanism of enzyme catalyst reaction (I) Chymotrypsin

MahaAbuAjamieh. BahaaNajjar. MamoonAhram

Chem 263 Dec 1, 2016

10/29/ Stability of Alkenes. Stability of Alkenes. Stability of Alkenes

REVIEW IN CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND ITS DERIVATIVES

6. The catalytic mechanism of arylsulfatase A and its theoretical investigation

Structure of Alkenes In ethene (ethylene) each carbon is bonded to 3 other atoms, with zero nonbonding electrons => sp 2 hybridization.

Important reactions of lipids

11/5/ Oxidation of Alkenes: Cleavage to Carbonyl Compounds. Oxidation of Alkenes: Cleavage to Carbonyl Compounds

Level 3 Chemistry, 2007

Chemistry 212 Fall Semester 1996 Examination #2

4 Types of Organic Polar Reactions

Transcription:

Subject Chemistry Paper No and Title Module No and Title Module Tag 9: ORGANIC -III (Reaction Mechanism-2) 17: Reduction by Metal hydrides Part-1I CHE_P9_M17

Table of Contents 1. Learning Outcomes 2. Introduction 3. Reduction of unsaturated carbonyl compounds 3.1 Relook on conjugation 3.2 Reduction with NaBH4 3.3 Reduction with DIBAL-H: 4. Reduction of carboxylic acids 4.1 Reductions of carboxylic acids to alcohols 4.2 Reductions of carboxylic acids to aldehydes 5. Reduction of Carboxylic acids derivatives 5.1 Reduction of carboxylic Esters to alcohols 5.2 Conversion of carboxylic acid derivatives to aldehydes 5.3 Reduction of acid amides to amines 6. Reduction of unsaturated carboxylic acids and esters 7. The reduction of Nitriles 7.1 Reduction of Nitriles to Amines 7.2 Reduction of Nitriles to Aldehydes 8. Reduction of unsaturated nitriles 9. Summary

1. Learning Outcomes After studying this module, you shall be able to Understand the hydride reduction on conjugated carbonyl compounds Comprehend the hydride reduction of carboxylic acids and derivatives Understand the hydride reduction of nitriles and unsaturated nitriles Apply the reduction using different hydrides on combinations of functional groups present in same compound. 2. Introduction Reduction is an invaluable process and can be used to remove functionality from a molecule and also for introducing stereocenters. In the previous module, we have studied that the reduction of carbonyl compounds to alcohols by metal hydrides involves the nucleophilic addition of hydride ion to the carbonyl group. The most common metal hydrides are lithium aluminium hydride (LiAlH4) and sodium borohydride (NaBH4). Unsaturation brings more chemistry to life. Conjugated double bonds have different properties from isolated double bonds, both physically and chemically. What will happen if there is unsaturation in the molecules bearing the carbon-hetero atom multiple bond? Will the reduction happen similarly or take some different course? In this module, we shall continue the study of reduction by hydrides on other groups like carboxylic acids and derivatives and nitriles and also see how the presence of conjugated double bonds affect the reduction. 3. Reduction of Unsaturated carbonyl compounds 3.1 Relook on conjugation You are already aware that the stability of conjugated dienes is higher than the nonconjugated dienes due to delocalization of charge through resonance. Let us understand how the presence of conjugation changes the reactivity of carbonyl compounds towards reduction by metal hydrides.

A carbonyl group shows nucleophilic addition reactions at carbonyl carbon. But look at the following examples A and B, they are the products of addition, not to the carbonyl group, but to the C=C bond. This is known as conjugate addition. Conjugate addition or direct addition to the carbonyl group? When do nucleophiles undergo conjugate addition (also called 1,4-addition ) and when do they add directly to the carbonyl group ( 1,2-addition )? This depends on the following factors: conditions of the reaction nature of the α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compound type of the nucleophile Reduction of α,β-unsaturated carbonyl derivatives poses a potential problem due to possibilities of 1,2 as well as 1,4 addition. Reduction with LiAlH4: Reduction of benzalacetone (10) can lead to either the allylic alcohol (11) via normal 1,2-addition of hydride to the carbonyl, or to the saturated alcohol (12) via 1,4-reduction (delivery of hydride to the alkenyl carbon). 3.2 Reduction with NaBH4: Sodium borohydride reduces α,β -unsaturated aldehydes and ketones to saturated alcohols.

The borohydride has reduced not only the carbonyl group but the double bond as well. In fact, the double bond is reduced first in a conjugate addition, followed by addition to the carbonyl group. 3.3 Reduction with DIBAL-H: Conjugated carbonyl compounds are reduced to allylic alcohols in the presence of diisobutylaluminum hydride (DIBAL-H) or sodium borohydride and cerium chloride. 4. Reduction of carboxylic Acids 4.1 Reduction of Carboxylic Acids to alcohols Carboxylic acids are easily reduced to primary alcohols by LiAlH4. The reaction goes via the intermediate stage of aldehyde, but does not stop at the aldehyde stage. The conditions required are particularly mild and the reduction proceeds quite well at normal temperature.

Example: NaBH4 and catalytic hydrogenation (i.e.h2/pt or H2/Ni) are ineffective for the reduction of carboxylic acid. The NaBH4 being a weak nucleophilic reagent, cannot attack the carbon of carboxylic groups as compared to the carbonyl group. Other hydrides have also been used to reduce carboxylic acid to alcohol: A combination of NaBH4 and an arylboronic acid have been used. E.g., Benzyltriethylammoniumborohydride in dichloromethane converts carboxylic acids to the alcohol. Borane is mainly good for carboxyl groups and allows selective reduction of carboxylic group in the presence of other groups (the reaction with double bonds takes place at about the same rate in ether solvents). Borane also reduces carboxylic acid salts. 4.2 Reduction of Carboxylic Acids to aldehydes Reduction of carboxylic acids to aldehyde stage is difficult because aldehydes are more reactive than carboxylic acids towards most reducing agents. Almost any reagent which converts acids to aldehydes also reduces aldehydes to primary alcohols. This can be achieved if we take weak reducing agent, e.g., lithium aluminium-tri(tbutoxy)hydride ( LiAl[OC(CH3)3]3H). It is weaker reducing agent as compared to lithium aluminium hydride. Acid chlorides are strong activators for the nucleophilic addition (due to I effect of Cl). Hence, it converts acid chlorides to aldehydes without further

reduction to alcohol. In these conditions, the aldehyde reduces more slowly and can be easily isolated. Mechanism Acid reduction to an aldehyde is a two-step process. Let us understand this with the help of following example: The first step is the conversion of the acid to the acid chloride The second step is the reduction of acid chloride using lithium aluminium-tri(tbutoxy)hydride into the corresponding aldehyde. 5. Reduction of carboxylic acid derivatives LiAlH4 reduces all type of carbonyl groups viz., in aldehyde, ketones, esters, carboxylic acids and amides. Each of these reductions gives an alcohol as the product, except the reduction of amide with LiAlH4, which gives an amine. The decreasing order of reactivity is as follows:

Note that the carboxylic acid and acid derivatives are not reduced by NaBH4. This is because the acid and acid derivatives are less electron deficient at the electrophilic carbon due to electron donating +M effect of the OR or NR2 or OH groups. 5.1 Reduction of Carboxylic Esters to Alcohols Lithium aluminum hydride reduces carboxylic esters to give two equivalents of alcohol. The reaction is of wide scope and has been used to reduce many esters. For example, Lactones yield diols. Among the reagents lithium triethylborohydride, LiAlH(Ot-Bu)3, and BH3-SMe2 in refluxing THF give the same product. Phenolic esters containing electron-withdrawing groups are reduced by NaBH4, but the reaction with other esters is slow therefore NaBH4 cannot be used as reagent for such reactions. Carboxylic esters can also be reduced to alcohols by hydrogenation over copper chromite catalysts, although high pressures and temperatures are required. Ester functions generally survive low-pressure catalytic hydrogenations. Before the LiAlH4 was discovered as the reducing agent for esters, the reaction was done using sodium in ethanol, a method known as the Bouveault Blanc procedure. This procedure is still sometimes used where selectivity is necessary.

5.2 Conversion of carboxylic acid derivatives to aldehydes There are few methods for reduction of carboxylic acid derivatives to form aldehydes; these methods are useful to change the properties of LAH such as reactivity and stability to allow partial reductions. For example, alkoxy or alkyl groups can be attached to aluminum in order to modifies the reactivity of the reagent as a hydride donor and also increases its solubility in nonpolar solvents. Two such reagents are Lithium tri-tertbutoxyaluminohydride (LtBAH), LiAl[OC(CH3)3]3H : Soluble in THF, diglyme & ether; Diisobutylaluminum hydride (DIBAH), [(CH3)2CHCH2]2AlH : Soluble in organic solvents such as toluene, THF & ether. Each of them has one equivalent of hydride only. Of these, Di-isobutyl aluminium hydride (i-bu2alh)2 (DIBAL-H or DIBAL ) is most commonly used for reducing carboxylic acid esters to aldehydes. This on the contrary, cannot be done using lithium aluminumhydride which give rise to alcohols. This is because, DIBAL is a weaker reducing agent and hence the reaction stops at aldehyde stage and no further reduction to alcohol take place. Example: Another example: Examples of reduction of acid chloride and acid amides to aldehydes:

5.3 Reduction of acid amides to Amines Acid amides do not give alcohols on hydride reduction, in contrast to other acid derivatives. Reaction of an amide with LiAlH4 initially gives an intermediate iminium salt, which is further reduced to an amine as the final product. Oxygen is completely removed from the molecule. For example, 6. Reduction of unsaturated Carboxylic Acids and esters For unsaturated esters, conjugate addition occurs. There is also a significant role of steric hindrance. If the β carbon of a carbonyl compound is more hindered, the nucleophile is less likely to attack there. But there are a number of nucleophiles that can undergo conjugate addition even at such highly substituted carbon atoms.. When lithium aluminium hydride is used as the source of H to attack as nucleophile on esters, the esters get reduced to alcohols. The reduction of α, β-unsaturated esters with DIBAL in polar solvents result in formation of allylic alcohols. E.g.,

7. The Reduction of Nitriles 7.1 Reduction of Nitriles to Amines LiAlH4 is a very strong reducing agent and is used to reduce nitrile. In the case of nitriles, the carbon of the carbon nitrogen triple bond acts as electrophilic center where the hydride is attached because the nitrogen being electronegative, the carbon is made electron deficient. Here, the hydride adds twice to the nitrile due to the triple bond. During the reaction, the aluminum complex basically acts as a giant proton i.e. a Lewis acid.

7.2 Reduction of Nitriles to aldehydes Diisobutylaluminium Hydride (DIBAL-H or DIBAL) can be used to reduce only one "oxidation state" i.e., from carbon nitrogen triple bond (-CN) to carbon-nitrogen double bond (-CH=N-). The later on hydrolysis leads to aldehyde formation. Hence DIBAL reduces nitriles to aldehydes. Notice that The mechanism for this is different because it is a Lewis acid. Hence it is required to coordinate with a Lewis base first before activating, followed by which the hydride is intramolecularly delivered. Unlike the other metal hydrides it is an electrophilic reagent. Another example: 8. Reduction of unsaturated nitriles Lithium aluminum hydride reduces nitriles to primary amines without affecting the alkene double bond in the unsaturated or conjugated nitriles. E.g.,

(I) (II) (III) (IV) Here, electrophilic nitrile carbon in (I) when attacked by hydride generates intermediate salt of an imine (II). Subsequently, the second hydride attacks the carbon via shift from aluminium to form metal amine salt (III). This metal amine salt on hydrolysis produces primary amine (IV). In reduction of carboxylic acid derivatives, sodium borohydride reacts with acyl chlorides and anhydrides in the presence of hydroxylic solvents such as water and alcohols. But at low temperatures they are sparingly soluble in nonpolar solvents. Also, sodium borohydride (NaBH4) is less reactive than LiAlH4, it cannot reduce amides and acids and slowly reduces esters. 9. Comparison Comparison of efficiency of various reducing agents to reduce the different functional groups

10. Summary LiAlH4 is a versatile reducing agent and reduces carbonyl compounds such as aldehydes and ketones, carboxylic acids, acid chlorides, acid anhydrides, esters, amides and nitriles. Reduction of α,β-unsaturated carbonyl derivatives poses a potential problem due to possibilities of 1,2 as well as 1,4 addition. Reduction of carboxylic acids and derivatives to alcohols can be achieved very easily by using LiAlH4, but for stopping at aldehyde stage other milder hydride reagent like DIBAL-H is used. Amides and nitriles on reduction with LiAlH4 produce amines.