This MCQ module is based on: Preparation and Physical Properties
Preparation and Physical Properties
Study Notes and Summary
- Preparation of Alcohols:
- From Alkenes:
- (i) By Acid-Catalysed Hydration: Alkenes react with water in presence of acid (H+) catalyst. Addition follows Markovnikov’s rule for unsymmetrical alkenes.
- Mechanism: Step 1 (Fast): Protonation of alkene by \(\mathrm{H_3O^+}\) to form a carbocation (electrophilic attack). Step 2: Nucleophilic attack of water on carbocation. Step 3: Deprotonation to form alcohol.
- (ii) By Hydroboration-Oxidation: (First reported by H.C. Brown in 1959, shared 1979 Nobel Prize).
- Diborane \(\mathrm{(BH_3)_2}\)​ reacts with alkenes to form trialkyl boranes (addition product).
- Trialkyl boranes are then oxidized to alcohol by hydrogen peroxide \(\mathrm{(H_2O_2)}\) in presence of aqueous sodium hydroxide \(\mathrm{(NaOH)}\).
- Addition of borane to double bond occurs such that boron attaches to sp2 carbon with more hydrogens.
- Alcohol formed appears as if water added opposite to Markovnikov’s rule. Excellent yield.
- (i) By Acid-Catalysed Hydration: Alkenes react with water in presence of acid (H+) catalyst. Addition follows Markovnikov’s rule for unsymmetrical alkenes.
- From Carbonyl Compounds:
- (i) By Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones: Reduced to corresponding alcohols.
- Catalytic Hydrogenation: Addition of H2​ in presence of finely divided catalysts (Pt, Pd, or Ni).
- Reducing Agents: Sodium borohydride \(\mathrm{(NaBH_4)}\) or lithium aluminium hydride \(\mathrm{(LiAlH_4)}\).
- Aldehydes yield primary alcohols.
- Ketones yield secondary alcohols.
- (ii) By Reduction of Carboxylic Acids and Esters:
- Carboxylic Acids: Reduced to primary alcohols by strong reducing agent \(\mathrm{LiAlH_4}\)​ (expensive, used for special chemicals).
- Commercially: Acids converted to esters, then reduced by catalytic hydrogenation.
- (i) By Reduction of Aldehydes and Ketones: Reduced to corresponding alcohols.
- From Grignard Reagents: Alcohols produced by reaction of Grignard reagents (RMgX) with aldehydes and ketones.
- Step 1: Nucleophilic addition of Grignard reagent to carbonyl group to form an adduct.
- Step 2: Hydrolysis of adduct yields an alcohol.
- Specific Products:
- Methanal \(\mathrm{(HCHO) + RMgX \rightarrow \ Primary\ alcohol}\).
- Other aldehydes \(\mathrm{(RCHO) + R’MgX \rightarrow\ Secondary\ alcohol}\).
- Ketones \(\mathrm{(RCOR’) + R”MgX \rightarrow\ Tertiary\ alcohol}\).
- From Alkenes:
- Preparation of Phenols:
- Phenol (carbolic acid) first isolated from coal tar. Now commercially produced synthetically.
- From Haloarenes: Chlorobenzene fused with (\mathrm{NaOH}\) at 623 K and 320 atm. Acidification of sodium phenoxide gives phenol.
- From Benzenesulphonic Acid: Benzene sulphonated with oleum to form benzenesulphonic acid. Heated with molten \(N_aOH\) to form sodium phenoxide, then acidified to phenol.
- From Diazonium Salts: Aromatic primary amine treated with nitrous acid \(\mathrm{(NaNO_2 + HCl)}\) at 273-278 K forms diazonium salt. Hydrolysed to phenols by warming with water or dilute acids.
- From Cumene (Industrial Method): Most worldwide production.
- Cumene (isopropylbenzene) oxidized with air to cumene hydroperoxide.
- Cumene hydroperoxide treated with dilute acid to yield phenol and acetone (by-product, obtained in large quantities).
- Physical Properties (Alcohols and Phenols):
- Properties mainly due to hydroxyl group; alkyl/aryl groups modify them.
- Boiling Points:
- Increase with increasing number of carbon atoms (increased van der Waals forces).
- Decrease with increased branching in carbon chain (decreased surface area, hence decreased van der Waals forces).
- Higher than hydrocarbons, ethers, haloalkanes/haloarenes of comparable molecular masses.
- Reason: Intermolecular hydrogen bonding in alcohols and phenols.
- Example: Ethanol (46/351 K) vs. Propane (44/231 K). Methoxymethane (46/248 K) is intermediate.
- Solubility (in water):
- Due to ability to form hydrogen bonds with water molecules.
- Decreases with increasing size of alkyl/aryl (hydrophobic) groups.
- Lower molecular mass alcohols are miscible with water in all proportions.
Practice MCQs
Assessment Worksheets
This assessment will be based on: Preparation and Physical Properties
Key Facts and analysis ( For Competitive Exam)
- Real-Life Connections & General Knowledge:
- The industrial production methods for phenol (from cumene, diazonium salts, haloarenes, benzenesulphonic acid) highlight the synthetic versatility of organic chemistry and the economic significance of specific industrial processes.
- H.C. Brown’s Nobel Prize for hydroboration-oxidation underscores the importance of reagent development in organic synthesis.
- Case-based Scenarios & Reasoning:
- Scenario 1: A chemist needs to synthesize propan-1-ol from propene.
- Question: What reaction conditions (reagents and steps) should be chosen to achieve this, considering the options for alkene hydration, and why?
- Reasoning: This requires choosing hydroboration-oxidation, as acid-catalyzed hydration would yield propan-2-ol (Markovnikov’s rule). This tests understanding of regioselectivity.
- Scenario 2: Two isomeric compounds, one an alcohol and one an ether, have very different boiling points despite identical molecular formulas.
- Question: Explain the primary reason for this difference in boiling points.
- Reasoning: This assesses understanding of intermolecular forces, specifically hydrogen bonding in alcohols vs. lack thereof in ethers.
- Scenario 1: A chemist needs to synthesize propan-1-ol from propene.
- Conceptual Application:
- Markovnikov’s Rule vs. Anti-Markovnikov Addition: Explain how acid-catalyzed hydration follows Markovnikov’s rule, while hydroboration-oxidation effectively achieves anti-Markovnikov addition, linking these to carbocation stability and steric hindrance/electronic effects.
- Nucleophilic Addition in Grignard Reactions: Detail the mechanism of Grignard reagent addition to carbonyl compounds, explaining why different types of aldehydes/ketones lead to primary, secondary, or tertiary alcohols.
- Hydrogen Bonding and Physical Properties: Discuss how intermolecular hydrogen bonding significantly affects the boiling points and water solubility of alcohols and phenols compared to other organic compounds of similar molecular mass.
- Numerical/Data Interpretation (if applicable):
- Boiling points example: Ethanol (351 K), Methoxymethane (248 K), Propane (231 K).
- Conditions for haloarene conversion to phenol: 623 K, 320 atm.
- Conditions for diazonium salt formation: 273-278 K.
- Comparative & Analytical Points:
- Compare and Contrast: Differentiate between acid-catalyzed hydration and hydroboration-oxidation as methods for synthesizing alcohols from alkenes, focusing on their regioselectivity (Markovnikov vs. anti-Markovnikov).
- Distinguish: Explain why \(\mathrm{LiAlH_4}\)​ is used for special chemical preparation and not commercially for carboxylic acid reduction, while catalytic hydrogenation is preferred commercially.
- Analyze Preparation Methods for Phenols: Compare the various laboratory and industrial methods for preparing phenols, noting any by-products (e.g., acetone from cumene method).
