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Page 1: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

1

Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24

Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24

Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena

Colleen KelleyChemistry DepartmentPima Community College

© John Wiley and Sons, Inc.

Version 1.0

Page 2: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Chapter Outline24.1 Carboxylic Acids

24.2 Nomenclature and Sources of Aliphatic Carboxylic Acids

24.3 Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

24.4 Classification of Carboxylic Acids

24.5 Preparation of Carboxylic Acids

Page 3: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Chapter Outline (continued)

24.6 Chemical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

24.7 Nomenclature of Esters24.8 Occurrence and

Physical Properties of Esters

24. 9 Polyesters: Condensation Polymers

24.10 Chemical Properties of Esters

24.11 Glycerol Esters

24.12 Soaps and Synthetic Detergents

24.13 Esters and Anhydrides of Phosphoric

Acid

Page 4: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 5: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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• The functional group of the carboxylic acid is called a carboxyl group and is represented in the following ways:

OH

O

or -COOH or CO2H

Page 6: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Nomenclature and Nomenclature and Sources of Sources of Aliphatic Aliphatic

Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 7: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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IUPAC Rules for Naming Carboxylic Acids1. To establish the parent name, identify the

longest carbon chain that includes the carboxyl group.

2. Drop the final –e from the corresponding hydrocarbon name.

3. Add the suffix –oic acid.

HCOOH, methanoic acid

CH3COOH ethanoic acid

CH3CH2COOH propanoic acid

Page 8: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Naming Carboxylic Acids

• Other groups bonded to the parent chain are numbered and named as we have done previously.

CH3CH2CHCH2COOH

CH3

12345

3-methylpentanoic acid

Page 9: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Page 10: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acids

• Use of Greek letters:

CH3CH2CH2CH2COOH12345

CH3CH2CHCOOH

OH

-hydroxybutyric acid2-hydroxybutanoic acid

Page 11: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Physical Properties of Physical Properties of Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 12: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

• Each aliphatic carboxylic acid molecule is polar and consists of a carboxylic acid group and a hydrocarbon group (-R).– Carbons 1-4 = water soluble– Carbons 5-8 = slightly water soluble– Carbons 8 and above = virtually insoluble in water

Page 13: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

• The comparatively high boiling points for carboxylic acids are due to intermolecular attractions resulting from hydrogen bonding.

R C

OH

O

RC

HO

O

Page 14: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

• Carboxylic acids are generally weak acids; that is, they are only slightly ionized in water.

H3CC

OH

O

H3CC

O-

O

+ H2O + H3O+

acetic acid acetate ion

hydronium ion

Page 15: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Classification of Classification of Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic AcidsClassification of Classification of Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 16: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Classification of Carboxylic Acids

• saturated monocarboxylic acids• unsaturated carboxylic acids• aromatic carboxylic acids• dicarboxylic acids• hydroxy acids• amino acids

Page 17: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Unsaturated Carboxylic Acids

• An unsaturated acid contains one or more C=C. – Acrylic acid, CH2=CHCOOH, also called propenoic

acid.

• Even one C=C bond exerts an influence on the physical and chemical properties of the acid.

Ex: stearic acid CH3(CH2)16COOH, mp = 70 C vs.

oleic acid CH3(CH2)7CH=CH(CH2)7COOH, mp = 16 C

Page 18: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Aromatic Carboxylic Acids• In an aromatic carboxylic acid, the carbon

of the carboxyl group (-COOH) is bonded directly to a carbon in an aromatic ring.

COOHCOOH

CH3

benzoic acid o-toluic acid

Page 19: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Page 20: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydroxy Acids• Hydroxy acids have the functional group

of an alcohol and a carboxylic acid.COOH

OH

o-hydroxybenzoic acidsalicylic acid

CH3CHCOOH

OH

2-hydroxypropanoic acidlactic acid

Page 21: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Amino Acids• Each amino acid molecule has a carboxyl

group that acts as an acid and an amino group that acts as a base.

• About 20 biologically important amino acids, each with a different group represented by R, are found in nature.

NH2CHCOOH

R

Page 22: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Preparation of Preparation of Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 23: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Preparation of Carboxylic Acids

• oxidation of an aldehyde or primary alcohol

• oxidation of alkyl groups attached to aromatic rings

• hydrolysis of nitriles

Page 24: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Oxidation of an Aldehyde or a Primary Alcohol

H

CR

Hprimary (1o)

alcohol

OH[O]

O

CR H + H2O[O]

O

CR OH

[O] = Cr2O72-

Page 25: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Oxidation of Alkyl Groups Attached to Aromatic Rings

CH3

NaMnO4NaOHheat

COO-Na+

toluene sodium benzoate

CH2CH3

NaMnO4NaOHheat

COO-Na+

ethylbenzene sodium benzoate

+ CO2 (g)

Page 26: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydrolysis of Nitriles

• RCN + 2 H2O RCOOH + NH4+

H+

Page 27: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Chemical Properties of Chemical Properties of Carboxylic AcidsCarboxylic Acids

Page 28: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Chemical Properties of Carboxylic Acids

1. Acid-Base reactions

2. Substitution reactions• acid chlorides

• acid anhydrides

• esters

• amides

Page 29: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Acid-Base Reactions• Because of their ability to form hydrogen

ions in solution, acids in general have the following properties:

1. Sour taste2. Change blue litmus to red and affect other

suitable indicators.3. Form water solutions with pH values less than

7.4. Undergo neutralization reactions with bases for

form water and a salt.

Page 30: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Acidity of Carboxylic Acids

H3C

C

O

OH + H2O H3C

C

O

O- + H3O+

H3C

C

O

OH + NaOH H3C

C

O

O-Na+ + H2O

Page 31: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Substitution Reactions

• acid chlorides

• acid anhydrides

• esters

• amides

Page 32: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Acid Chloride Formation

• Thionyl chloride (SOCl2) reacts with carboxylic acids to form acid chlorides.

RC

OH

O

+ SOCl2

RC

Cl

O

+ SO2 + HCl

carboxylicacid

thionylchloride acid

chloride

Page 33: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Acid Anhydride Formation•An organic anhydride is formed by the elimination of water from two molecules of carboxylic acid.

RC

OH

O

R'C

HO

O

+

RC

O

O

R'C

O

+ H2O

anhydride

Page 34: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Ester Formation• An ester is formed by the reaction of an

acid with an alcohol or a phenol; water is also produced in the reaction:

RC

OH

O

R'HO

+

RC

O

O

R'+ H2OH+

carboxylicacid

alcohol ester

Page 35: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Nomenclature Nomenclature of Estersof Esters

Nomenclature Nomenclature of Estersof Esters

Page 36: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Nomenclature of Esters• The alcohol part is named first, followed

by the name of the acid modified to end in –ate.

RC

O

O

R'

acid alcohol

H3CC

O

O

CH3

ethanoateoracetate

methyl

methyl ethanoate ormethyl acetate

Page 37: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Page 38: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Occurrence and Occurrence and Physical Properties Physical Properties

of Estersof Esters

Page 39: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Properties of Esters• Simple esters derived from monocarboxylic

acids and monohydroxy alcohols are colorless, generally nonpolar liquids or solids.

• Low- and intermediate-molar-mass esters (both acids and alcohols up to about 10 carbons) are liquid with characteristic (usually fragrant or fruity) odors.

Page 40: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Occurrence and Properties of Esters

• High-molar-mass esters (formed from acids or alcohols of 16 or more carbons) are waxes and are obtained from various plants.– They are used in furniture wax and automobile

wax preparations.– Carnauba wax contains esters of 24-and 28-

carbon fatty acids and 32- and 34-carbon alcohols.

Page 41: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Polyesters: Polyesters: Condensation Condensation

PolymersPolymers

Polyesters: Polyesters: Condensation Condensation

PolymersPolymers

Page 42: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Polyesters: Condensation Polymers

• Condensation polymers are formed by substitution reactions between neighboring monomers.

• The polyesters are joined by ester linkages between carboxylic acid and alcohol groups.– The macromolecule formed may be linear or

cross-linked.

Page 43: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Polyesters: Condensation Polymers

HOOC(CH2)xCOOH + HO(CH2)yOH -C(CH2)xC-O(CH2)yO-

OO

diacid diol polyester

Page 44: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Chemical Chemical Properties of Properties of

EstersEsters

Chemical Chemical Properties of Properties of

EstersEsters

Page 45: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydrolysis

• The most important reaction of esters is hydrolysis – the splitting of molecules through the addition of water.

• A catalyst is often required.– An acid or base– In living systems, enzymes act as catalysts.

Page 46: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Acid Hydrolysis

• The hydrolysis of an ester involves the reaction with water to form a carboxylic acid and an alcohol.

RC

HO

O

R'OH

+

RC

O

O

R' + H2OH+

carboxylicacid

alcoholester

or enzyme

Page 47: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Alkaline Hydrolysis (Saponification)• Saponification is the hydrolysis of an ester by a

strong base (NaOH or KOH) to produce an alcohol and a salt (or soap if the salt formed is from a high-molar-mass acid).

• Notice that in saponification, the base is a reactant and not a catalyst.

O-Na+C

R

O

R'OH

+

RC

O

O

R'+ NaOH H2O

saltalcoholester

Page 48: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Glycerol EstersGlycerol EstersGlycerol EstersGlycerol Esters

Page 49: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Fats and Oils• Fats and oils are esters of glycerol and

predominantly long-chain fatty acids.

• Fats and oils are also called triacylglycerols or triglycerides, since each molecule is derived from one molecule of glycerol and three molecules of fatty acid:

Page 50: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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H C O

C OH

C OH

H

H

C R

O

C R'

O

C R"

O

General formula for a triacylglycerol

glycerolportion

Page 51: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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TriacylglycerolThe structural formulas of triacylglycerol molecules differ because:

1. The length of the fatty acid chain varies from 4 to 20 carbons, but the number of carbon atoms in the chain is nearly always even.

2. Each fatty acid may be saturated or unsaturated and may contain one, two, or three C=C.

3. A triacylglycerol may, and frequently does, contain three different fatty acids.

Page 52: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Page 53: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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• The most abundant unsaturated acids in fats and oils contain 18 carbon atoms.

• In all of these naturally occurring unsaturated acids, the configuration about C=C is cis.

Page 54: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Physical Differences Between Fats & Oils

• Fats are solid; oils are liquid at room temperature

• Fats contain a larger portion of saturated fatty acids whereas oils contain greater amounts of unsaturated fatty acids.– Polyunsaturated means that each molecule of

fat contains several C=C.

Page 55: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Comparison of Fats & Oils

• Fats come from animal sources:

–Lard from hogs, tallow from cattle and sheep

• Oils come from vegetable sources:

–Olives, corn, peanut, soybean, canola

Page 56: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydrogenation of Glycerides

• Hydrogen adds to the C=C of oil to saturate it and form fats:

• H2 + -CH=CH- -CH2-CH2-

• In practice, only some of the C=C are allowed to become saturated.– Partial hydrogenation

Ni

Page 57: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydrogenolysis

• Triacylglycerols can be split and reduced in a reaction called hydrogenolysis (splitting by hydrogen).

Page 58: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Hydrolysis

• Triacylglycerols can be hydrolyzed, yielding fatty acids and glycerol.

Page 59: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Saponification

• The saponification of a fat or oil involves the alkaline hydrolysis of a triester.

• The products formed are glycerol and the alkali metal salts of fatty acids, which are called soaps.

Page 60: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Soaps and Synthetic Soaps and Synthetic DetergentsDetergents

Soaps and Synthetic Soaps and Synthetic DetergentsDetergents

Page 61: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Soaps and Synthetic Detergents

• In the broadest sense possible, a detergent is simply a cleansing agent.

• A soap is distinguished from a synthetic detergent on the basis of chemical composition and not on the basis of function or usage.

Page 62: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Soaps• Salts of long-chained fatty acids are

called soaps.

• Fat or oil + NaOH Soap + Glycerol

Page 63: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

63Figure 24. 1 Cleansing action of soap.

Page 64: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Synthetic Detergents - AnionicThe one great advantage these synthetic detergents have over soap is that their Ca+2, Mg+2, and Fe+3 salts, as well as their Na+1 salts, are soluble in water. Therefore, they are nearly as effective in hard water as in soft water.

OSO3-Na+

sodium lauryl sulfate

nonpolar hydrophobic end,grease soluble

polar hydrophilic end,water soluble

Page 65: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Synthetic Detergents – Nonionic• The molecule of a nonionic detergent contains a

grease-soluble component and a water soluble component.

• Some of these substances are especially useful in automatic washing machines because they have good detergent, but low sudsing, properties.

CH3(CH2)10CH2-O-(CH2CH2O)7-CH2CH2OH

grease soluble,hydrophobic water soluble, hydrophilic

Page 66: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Biodegradability

• Organic substances that are readily decomposed by microorganisms in the environment are said to be biodegradable.

• Detergents that contain straight-chain alkyl groups are biodegradable.

Page 67: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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OSO3-Na+

a biodegradable detergent

OSO3-Na+

a nonbiodegradable detergent

Page 68: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Esters and Esters and Anhydrides of Anhydrides of

Phosphoric AcidPhosphoric Acid

Esters and Esters and Anhydrides of Anhydrides of

Phosphoric AcidPhosphoric Acid

Page 69: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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Phosphoric Acid• Phosphoric acid has a Lewis structure similar to

that of a carboxylic acid.

• Phosphoric acid reacts with an alcohol to form a phosphate ester.

HO

P

O

OH

OH

+ HOCH2CH3

HO

P

O

OCH2CH3

OH

+ H2O

phosphoricacid

ethanol

monoethyl phosphate

Page 70: 1 Carboxylic Acids and Esters Chapter 24 Hein * Best * Pattison * Arena Colleen Kelley Chemistry Department Pima Community College © John Wiley and Sons,

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