Alcohols – Introduction

Alcohols are derivatives of water in which one hydrogen atom is replaced by an alkyl group. General formula: R–OH

  • –OH group is directly attached to an aliphatic carbon
  • Simplest alcohol: Methanol (CH3OH)

Preparation of Alcohols

From Alkenes (Hydration)

  • Acid-catalysed hydration (H2SO4): follows Markovnikov’s rule; rearrangement possible
  • Oxymercuration–demercuration: Markovnikov addition without rearrangement
  • Hydroboration–oxidation: anti-Markovnikov addition

Reduction Methods

  • Aldehydes → 1° alcohols
  • Ketones → 2° alcohols
  • Carboxylic acids, acid chlorides → alcohols (LiAlH4)
  • NaBH4 reduces aldehydes, ketones and acid halides only

From Grignard Reagents (RMgX)

  • HCHO + RMgX → 1° alcohol
  • Aldehyde + RMgX → 2° alcohol
  • Ketone + RMgX → 3° alcohol
  • Ester + 2RMgX → 3° alcohol

Commercial Preparation

  • Methanol: CO + 2H2 → CH3OH (Cu–ZnO–Cr2O3)
  • Ethanol: Fermentation of sugars

Physical Properties of Alcohols

  • Higher boiling point than haloalkanes (H-bonding)
  • Boiling point decreases with branching
  • Lower alcohols are completely miscible with water

Acidity of Alcohols

  • Alcohols are weaker acids than water
  • Acidic strength: 1° > 2° > 3° alcohol
  • More +I groups → less acidic

Reactions of Alcohols

Cleavage of O–H Bond

  • With Na → sodium alkoxide + H2
  • With RMgX → alkane

Cleavage of C–O Bond

  • With PCl5, PCl3, SOCl2 → alkyl halides
  • Reactivity: 3° > 2° > 1° alcohol

Lucas Test

  • 3° alcohol: immediate turbidity
  • 2° alcohol: turbidity in 5–10 min
  • 1° alcohol: no turbidity at room temp

Dehydration (conc. H2SO4)

  • At 140°C → ether
  • At 170°C → alkene
  • Ease: 3° > 2° > 1° alcohol

Oxidation

  • 1° alcohol → aldehyde → acid
  • 2° alcohol → ketone
  • 3° alcohol → no oxidation

Polyhydric Alcohols

Ethylene Glycol (Ethane-1,2-diol)

  • Colourless, viscous liquid
  • Used as antifreeze
  • High boiling point (extensive H-bonding)

Glycerol (Propane-1,2,3-triol)

  • Prepared by saponification of fats/oils
  • Highly viscous, hygroscopic liquid
  • Used in explosives (nitroglycerine), cosmetics, medicines

Phenols

Phenols have –OH group directly attached to an aromatic ring.

Acidity of Phenols

  • More acidic than alcohols
  • EWG increases acidity; EDG decreases acidity
  • p-nitrophenol > o-nitrophenol > m-nitrophenol

Preparation of Phenol

  • From benzene sulphonate (fusion with NaOH)
  • From chlorobenzene (Dow’s process)
  • From diazonium salts
  • Cumene–phenol process (industrial)

Reactions of Phenol

  • Electrophilic substitution (o,p-directing)
  • Nitration → picric acid
  • Kolbe reaction → salicylic acid
  • Reimer–Tiemann reaction → salicylaldehyde

Ethers

Ethers are derivatives of water in which both hydrogens are replaced by alkyl/aryl groups.

Preparation

  • Dehydration of 1° alcohols
  • Williamson ether synthesis (SN2)

Properties

  • Lower boiling point than alcohols
  • Polar but no hydrogen bonding
  • Lower ethers are soluble in water

Reactions of Ethers

  • With HI: cleavage of C–O bond
  • Reactivity: HI > HBr > HCl
  • Aromatic ethers undergo electrophilic substitution (o,p-directing)
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