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Aldehyde

In organic chemistry, an aldehyde (/ˈældɪhd/) is an organic compound containing a functional group with the structure R−CH=O.[1] The functional group itself (without the "R" side chain) can be referred to as an aldehyde but can also be classified as a formyl group. Aldehydes are common and play important roles in the technology and biological spheres.[2][3]

Structure and bonding

Aldehydes feature a carbon center that is connected by a double bond to oxygen and a single bond to hydrogen and single bond to a third substituent, which is carbon or, in the case of formaldehyde, hydrogen. The central carbon is often described as being sp2-hybridized. The aldehyde group is somewhat polar. The C=O bond length is about 120-122 picometers.[4]

Physical properties and characterization

Aldehydes have properties that are diverse and that depend on the remainder of the molecule. Smaller aldehydes are more soluble in water, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde completely so. The volatile aldehydes have pungent odors.

Aldehydes can be identified by spectroscopic methods. Using IR spectroscopy, they display a strong νCO band near 1700 cm−1. In their 1H NMR spectra, the formyl hydrogen center absorbs near δH 9.5 to 10, which is a distinctive part of the spectrum. This signal shows the characteristic coupling to any protons on the α carbon with a small coupling constant typically less than 3.0 Hz. The 13C NMR spectra of aldehydes and ketones gives a suppressed (weak) but distinctive signal at δC 190 to 205.

Applications and occurrence

 

Important aldehydes and related compounds. The aldehyde group (or formyl group) is colored red. From the left: (1) formaldehyde and (2) its trimer 1,3,5-trioxane, (3) acetaldehyde and (4) its enol vinyl alcohol, (5) glucose (pyranose form as α-D-glucopyranose), (6) the flavorant cinnamaldehyde, (7) retinal, which forms with opsins photoreceptors, and (8) the vitamin pyridoxal.

Naturally occurring aldehydes

Traces of many aldehydes are found in essential oils and often contribute to their favorable odours, e.g. cinnamaldehyde, cilantro, and vanillin. Possibly because of the high reactivity of the formyl group, aldehydes are not common in several of the natural building blocks: amino acids, nucleic acids, lipids. Most sugars, however, are derivatives of aldehydes. These aldoses exist as hemiacetals, a sort of masked form of the parent aldehyde. For example, in aqueous solution only a tiny fraction of glucose exists as the aldehyde.

Synthesis

There are several methods for preparing aldehydes,[2] but the dominant technology is hydroformylation.[5] Illustrative is the generation of butyraldehyde by hydroformylation of propene:

 

Oxidative routes

Aldehydes are commonly generated by alcohol oxidation. In industry, formaldehyde is produced on a large scale by oxidation of methanol.[6] Oxygen is the reagent of choice, being "green" and cheap. In the laboratory, more specialized oxidizing agents are used, but chromium(VI) reagents are popular. Oxidation can be achieved by heating the alcohol with an acidified solution of potassium dichromate. In this case, excess dichromate will further oxidize the aldehyde to a carboxylic acid, so either the aldehyde is distilled out as it forms (if volatile) or milder reagents such as PCC are used.[7]

 

Oxidation of primary alcohols to form aldehydes can be achieved under milder, chromium-free conditions by employing methods or reagents such as IBX acid, Dess–Martin periodinane, Swern oxidation, TEMPO,. or the Oppenauer oxidation.[citation needed]

Another oxidation route significant in industry is the Wacker process, whereby ethylene is oxidized to acetaldehyde in the presence of copper and palladium catalysts (acetaldehyde is also produced on a large scale by the hydration of acetylene).

On the laboratory scale, α-hydroxy acids are used as precursors to prepare aldehydes via oxidative cleavage.[8][9]

Specialty methods

Reaction name Substrate Comment
Ozonolysis Alkenes Ozonolysis of non-fully-substituted alkenes yield aldehydes upon a reductive work-up.
Organic reduction Esters Reduction of an ester with diisobutylaluminium hydride (DIBAL-H) or sodium aluminium hydride.
Rosenmund reaction Acyl chlorides Acyl chlorides selectively reduced to aldehydes. Lithium tri-t-butoxyaluminium hydride (LiAlH(OtBu)3) is an effective reagent.[citation needed]
Wittig reaction Ketones A modified Wittig reaction using methoxymethylenetriphenylphosphine as a reagent.
Formylation reactions Nucleophilic arenes Various reactions, for example the Vilsmeier-Haack reaction.
Nef reaction Nitro compounds The acid hydrolysis of a primary nitro compound to form an aldehyde.
Kornblum oxidation Haloalkanes The oxidation of primary halide with dimethyl sulfoxide to form an aldehyde.
Zincke reaction Pyridines Zincke aldehydes formed in a reaction variation.
Stephen aldehyde synthesis Nitriles Hydrolysis of an iminium salt generated by tin(II) chloride and HCl to form an aldehyde.
Geminal halide hydrolysis Geminal dihalides Hydrolysis of primary geminal dihalides to yield aldehydes.
Meyers synthesis Oxazines Hemiaminal oxazine hydrolysis with water and oxalic acid to yield an aldehyde.
Hofmann rearrangement variation[10][11] unsaturated or α-hydroxy amides Aldehydes via the hydrolysis of an intermediate carbamate.
McFadyen-Stevens reaction Hydrazides Base-catalyzed thermal decomposition of acylsulfonylhydrazides.
Biotransformation Alkenes Lyophilized cell cultures of Trametes hirsuta in the presence of oxygen.[12]

Common reactions

Aldehydes participate in many reactions.[2] From the industrial perspective, important reactions are (a) condensations, e.g., to prepare plasticizers and polyols, and (b) reduction to produce alcohols, especially "oxo-alcohols". From the biological perspective, the key reactions involve addition of nucleophiles to the formyl carbon in the formation of imines (oxidative deamination) and hemiacetals (structures of aldose sugars).[2]

Acid-base reactions

Because of resonance stabilization of the conjugate base, an α-hydrogen in an aldehyde is weakly acidic, with a pKa near 17. This acidification is attributed to (i) the electron-withdrawing quality of the formyl center and (ii) the fact that the conjugate base, an enolate anion, delocalizes its negative charge. The formyl proton itself does not readily undergo deprotonation.

Enolization

Aldehydes (except those without an alpha carbon, or without protons on the alpha carbon, such as formaldehyde and benzaldehyde) can exist in either the keto or the enol tautomer. Keto–enol tautomerism is catalyzed by either acid or base. Usually the enol is the minority tautomer, but it is more reactive. The enolization typically reverses several times per second.[13]

Reduction

The formyl group can be readily reduced to a primary alcohol (−CH2OH). Typically this conversion is accomplished by catalytic hydrogenation either directly or by transfer hydrogenation. Stoichiometric reductions are also popular, as can be effected with sodium borohydride.

Oxidation

The formyl group readily oxidizes to the corresponding carboxyl group (−COOH). The preferred oxidant in industry is oxygen or air. In the laboratory, popular oxidizing agents include potassium permanganate, nitric acid, chromium(VI) oxide, and chromic acid. The combination of manganese dioxide, cyanide, acetic acid and methanol will convert the aldehyde to a methyl ester.[14]

Another oxidation reaction is the basis of the silver-mirror test. In this test, an aldehyde is treated with Tollens' reagent, which is prepared by adding a drop of sodium hydroxide solution into silver nitrate solution to give a precipitate of silver(I) oxide, and then adding just enough dilute ammonia solution to redissolve the precipitate in aqueous ammonia to produce [Ag(NH3)2]+ complex. This reagent converts aldehydes to carboxylic acids without attacking carbon–carbon double bonds. The name silver-mirror test arises because this reaction produces a precipitate of silver, whose presence can be used to test for the presence of an aldehyde.

A further oxidation reaction involves Fehling's reagent as a test. The Cu2+ complex ions are reduced to a red-brick-coloured Cu2O precipitate.

If the aldehyde cannot form an enolate (e.g., benzaldehyde), addition of strong base induces the Cannizzaro reaction. This reaction results in disproportionation, producing a mixture of alcohol and carboxylic acid.

Nucleophilic addition reactions

Nucleophiles add readily to the carbonyl group. In the product, the carbonyl carbon becomes sp3-hybridized, being bonded to the nucleophile, and the oxygen center becomes protonated:

 

In many cases, a water molecule is removed after the addition takes place; in this case, the reaction is classed as an additionelimination or additioncondensation reaction. There are many variations of nucleophilic addition reactions.

Oxygen nucleophiles

In the acetalisation reaction, under acidic or basic conditions, an alcohol adds to the carbonyl group and a proton is transferred to form a hemiacetal. Under acidic conditions, the hemiacetal and the alcohol can further react to form an acetal and water. Simple hemiacetals are usually unstable, although cyclic ones such as glucose can be stable. Acetals are stable, but revert to the aldehyde in the presence of acid. Aldehydes can react with water to form hydrates, R−CH(OH)2. These diols are stable when strong electron withdrawing groups are present, as in chloral hydrate. The mechanism of formation is identical to hemiacetal formation.

Nitrogen nucleophiles

In alkylimino-de-oxo-bisubstitution, a primary or secondary amine adds to the carbonyl group and a proton is transferred from the nitrogen to the oxygen atom to create a carbinolamine. In the case of a primary amine, a water molecule can be eliminated from the carbinolamine intermediate to yield an imine or its trimer, a hexahydrotriazine This reaction is catalyzed by acid. Hydroxylamine (NH2OH) can also add to the carbonyl group. After the elimination of water, this results in an oxime. An ammonia derivative of the form H2NNR2 such as hydrazine (H2NNH2) or 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine can also be the nucleophile and after the elimination of water, resulting in the formation of a hydrazone, which are usually orange crystalline solids. This reaction forms the basis of a test for aldehydes and ketones.[15]

Carbon nucleophiles

The cyano group in HCN can add to the carbonyl group to form cyanohydrins, R−CH(OH)CN. In this reaction the CN ion is the nucleophile that attacks the partially positive carbon atom of the carbonyl group. The mechanism involves a pair of electrons from the carbonyl-group double bond transferring to the oxygen atom, leaving it single-bonded to carbon and giving the oxygen atom a negative charge. This intermediate ion rapidly reacts with H+, such as from the HCN molecule, to form the alcohol group of the cyanohydrin.

Organometallic compounds, such as organolithium reagents, Grignard reagents, or acetylides, undergo nucleophilic addition reactions, yielding a substituted alcohol group. Related reactions include organostannane additions, Barbier reactions, and the Nozaki–Hiyama–Kishi reaction.

In the aldol reaction, the metal enolates of ketones, esters, amides, and carboxylic acids add to aldehydes to form β-hydroxycarbonyl compounds (aldols). Acid or base-catalyzed dehydration then leads to α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds. The combination of these two steps is known as the aldol condensation.

The Prins reaction occurs when a nucleophilic alkene or alkyne reacts with an aldehyde as electrophile. The product of the Prins reaction varies with reaction conditions and substrates employed.

Bisulfite reaction

Aldehydes characteristically form "addition compounds" with bisulfites:

 

This reaction is used as a test for aldehydes and is useful for separation or purification of aldehydes.[15][16]

More complex reactions

Reaction name Product Comment
Wolff–Kishner reduction Alkane If an aldehyde is converted to a simple hydrazone (RCH=NHNH2) and this is heated with a base such as KOH, the terminal carbon is fully reduced to a methyl group. The Wolff–Kishner reaction may be performed as a one-pot reaction, giving the overall conversion RCH=O → RCH3.
Pinacol coupling reaction Diol With reducing agents such as magnesium
Wittig reaction Alkene Reagent: an ylide
Takai reaction Alkene Diorganochromium reagent
Corey–Fuchs reactions Alkyne Phosphine-dibromomethylene reagent
Ohira–Bestmann reaction Alkyne Reagent: dimethyl (diazomethyl)phosphonate
Johnson–Corey–Chaykovsky reaction Epoxide Reagent: a sulfonium ylide
Oxo-Diels–Alder reaction Pyran Aldehydes can, typically in the presence of suitable catalysts, serve as partners in cycloaddition reactions. The aldehyde serves as the dienophile component, giving a pyran or related compound.
Hydroacylation Ketone In hydroacylation an aldehyde is added over an unsaturated bond to form a ketone.
Decarbonylation Alkane Catalysed by transition metals

Dialdehydes

A dialdehyde is an organic chemical compound with two aldehyde groups. The nomenclature of dialdehydes have the ending -dial or sometimes -dialdehyde. Short aliphatic dialdehydes are sometimes named after the diacid from which they can be derived. An example is butanedial, which is also called succinaldehyde (from succinic acid).

Biochemistry

Some aldehydes are substrates for aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymes which metabolize aldehydes in the body. There are toxicities associated with some aldehydes that are related to neurodegenerative disease, heart disease, and some types of cancer.[17]

Examples of aldehydes

Examples of dialdehydes

Uses

Of all aldehydes, formaldehyde is produced on the largest scale, about 6000000 tons per year. It is mainly used in the production of resins when combined with urea, melamine, and phenol (e.g., Bakelite). It is a precursor to methylene diphenyl diisocyanate ("MDI"), a precursor to polyurethanes.[6] The second main aldehyde is butyraldehyde, of which about 2500000 tons per year are prepared by hydroformylation. It is the principal precursor to 2-ethylhexanol, which is used as a plasticizer.[18] Acetaldehyde once was a dominating product, but production levels have declined to less than 1000000 tons per year because it mainly served as a precursor to acetic acid, which is now prepared by carbonylation of methanol. Many other aldehydes find commercial applications, often as precursors to alcohols, the so-called oxo alcohols, which are used in detergents. Some aldehydes are produced only on a small scale (less than 1000 tons per year) and are used as ingredients in flavours and perfumes such as Chanel No. 5. These include cinnamaldehyde and its derivatives, citral, and lilial.

Nomenclature

IUPAC names for aldehydes

The common names for aldehydes do not strictly follow official guidelines, such as those recommended by IUPAC, but these rules are useful. IUPAC prescribes the following nomenclature for aldehydes:[19][20][21]

  1. Acyclic aliphatic aldehydes are named as derivatives of the longest carbon chain containing the aldehyde group. Thus, HCHO is named as a derivative of methane, and CH3CH2CH2CHO is named as a derivative of butane. The name is formed by changing the suffix -e of the parent alkane to -al, so that HCHO is named methanal, and CH3CH2CH2CHO is named butanal.
  2. In other cases, such as when a −CHO group is attached to a ring, the suffix -carbaldehyde may be used. Thus, C6H11CHO is known as cyclohexanecarbaldehyde. If the presence of another functional group demands the use of a suffix, the aldehyde group is named with the prefix formyl-. This prefix is preferred to methanoyl-.
  3. If the compound is a natural product or a carboxylic acid, the prefix oxo- may be used to indicate which carbon atom is part of the aldehyde group; for example, CHOCH2COOH is named 3-oxoethanoic acid.
  4. If replacing the aldehyde group with a carboxyl group (−COOH) would yield a carboxylic acid with a trivial name, the aldehyde may be named by replacing the suffix -ic acid or -oic acid in this trivial name by -aldehyde.

Etymology

The word aldehyde was coined by Justus von Liebig as a contraction of the Latin alcohol dehydrogenatus (dehydrogenated alcohol).[22][23] In the past, aldehydes were sometimes named after the corresponding alcohols, for example, vinous aldehyde for acetaldehyde. (Vinous is from Latin vinum "wine", the traditional source of ethanol, cognate with vinyl.)

The term formyl group is derived from the Latin word formica "ant". This word can be recognized in the simplest aldehyde, formaldehyde, and in the simplest carboxylic acid, formic acid.

See also

References

  1. ^ IUPAC Gold Book, aldehydes.
  2. ^ a b c d Smith, Michael B.; March, Jerry (2007), Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure (6th ed.), New York: Wiley-Interscience, ISBN 978-0-471-72091-1
  3. ^ Saul Patai, ed. (1966). The Carbonyl Group. PATAI'S Chemistry of Functional Groups. Vol. 1. John Wiley & Sons. doi:10.1002/9780470771051. ISBN 9780470771051.Jacob Zabicky, ed. (1970). The Carbonyl Group. PATAI'S Chemistry of Functional Groups. Vol. 2. John Wiley & Sons. doi:10.1002/9780470771228. ISBN 9780470771228.
  4. ^ G. Berthier, J. Serre (1966). "General and Theoretical Aspects of the Carbonyl Group". In Saul Patai (ed.). The Carbonyl Group. PATAI'S Chemistry of Functional Groups. Vol. 1. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 1–77. doi:10.1002/9780470771051.ch1. ISBN 9780470771051.
  5. ^ Bertleff, W.; Roeper, M. and Sava, X. (2003) "Carbonylation" in Ullmann’s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH: Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a05_217.pub2
  6. ^ a b Reuss, G.; Disteldorf, W.; Gamer, A. O. and Hilt, A. (2005) "Formaldehyde" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a11_619.
  7. ^ Ratcliffe, R. W. (1988). "Oxidation with the Chromium Trioxide-Pyridine Complex Prepared in situ: 1-Decanal". Organic Syntheses.; Collective Volume, vol. 6, p. 373
  8. ^ Ōeda, Haruomi (1934). "Oxidation of some α-hydroxy-acids with lead tetraacetate". Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan. 9 (1): 8–14. doi:10.1246/bcsj.9.8.
  9. ^ Nwaukwa, Stephen; Keehn, Philip (1982). "Oxidative cleavage of α-diols, α-diones, α-hydroxy-ketones and α-hydroxy- and α-keto acids with calcium hypochlorite [Ca(OCl)2]". Tetrahedron Letters. 23 (31): 3135–3138. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(00)88578-0.
  10. ^ Weerman, R.A. (1913). "Einwirkung von Natriumhypochlorit auf Amide ungesättigter Säuren". Justus Liebigs Annalen der Chemie. 401 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1002/jlac.19134010102.
  11. ^ Everett, Wallis; Lane, John (1946). The Hofmann Reaction. Organic Reactions. Vol. 3. pp. 267–306. doi:10.1002/0471264180.or003.07. ISBN 9780471005285.
  12. ^ Sutton, Peter; Whittall, John (2012). Practical Methods for Biocatalysis and Biotransformations 2. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. pp. 199–202. ISBN 9781119991397.
  13. ^ aldehyde Tautomerism|Britannica
  14. ^ Corey, Elias J.; Gilman, Norman W.; Ganem, B. E. (1968). "New methods for the oxidation of aldehydes to carboxylic acids and esters". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 90 (20): 5616–5617. doi:10.1021/ja01022a059.
  15. ^ a b Shriner, R. L.; Hermann, C. K. F.; Morrill, T. C.; Curtin, D. Y.; Fuson, R. C. (1997). The Systematic Identification of Organic Compounds. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-59748-3.
  16. ^ Furigay, Maxwell H.; Boucher, Maria M.; Mizgier, Nikola A.; Brindle, Cheyenne S. (2018-04-02). "Separation of Aldehydes and Reactive Ketones from Mixtures Using a Bisulfite Extraction Protocol". Journal of Visualized Experiments (134): 57639. doi:10.3791/57639. ISSN 1940-087X. PMC 5933314. PMID 29658940.
  17. ^ Chen, Che-Hong; Ferreira, Julio Cesar Batista; Gross, Eric R.; Rosen, Daria Mochly (1 January 2014). "Targeting Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 2: New Therapeutic Opportunities". Physiological Reviews. 94 (1): 1–34. doi:10.1152/physrev.00017.2013. PMC 3929114. PMID 24382882.
  18. ^ Kohlpaintner, C.; Schulte, M.; Falbe, J.; Lappe, P. and Weber, J. (2008) "Aldehydes, Aliphatic" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a01_321.pub2.
  19. ^ Short Summary of IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds 2006-09-01 at the Wayback Machine, web page, University of Wisconsin Colleges, accessed on line August 4, 2007.
  20. ^ §R-5.6.1, Aldehydes, thioaldehydes, and their analogues, A Guide to IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds: recommendations 1993, IUPAC, Commission on Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry, Blackwell Scientific, 1993.
  21. ^ §R-5.7.1, Carboxylic acids, A Guide to IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds: recommendations 1993, IUPAC, Commission on Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry, Blackwell Scientific, 1993.
  22. ^ Liebig, J. (1835) "Sur les produits de l'oxidation de l'alcool" (On the products of the oxidation of alcohol), Annales de Chimie et de Physique, 59: 289–327. From page 290: "Je le décrirai dans ce mémoire sous le nom d'aldehyde ; ce nom est formé de alcool dehydrogenatus." (I will describe it in this memoir by the name of aldehyde; this name is formed from alcohol dehydrogenatus.)
  23. ^ Crosland, Maurice P. (2004), Historical Studies in the Language of Chemistry, Courier Dover Publications, ISBN 9780486438023.

External links

aldehyde, organic, chemistry, aldehyde, organic, compound, containing, functional, group, with, structure, functional, group, itself, without, side, chain, referred, aldehyde, also, classified, formyl, group, common, play, important, roles, technology, biologi. In organic chemistry an aldehyde ˈ ae l d ɪ h aɪ d is an organic compound containing a functional group with the structure R CH O 1 The functional group itself without the R side chain can be referred to as an aldehyde but can also be classified as a formyl group Aldehydes are common and play important roles in the technology and biological spheres 2 3 Aldehyde structure Contents 1 Structure and bonding 2 Physical properties and characterization 3 Applications and occurrence 3 1 Naturally occurring aldehydes 4 Synthesis 4 1 Oxidative routes 4 2 Specialty methods 5 Common reactions 5 1 Acid base reactions 5 2 Enolization 5 3 Reduction 5 4 Oxidation 5 5 Nucleophilic addition reactions 5 5 1 Oxygen nucleophiles 5 5 2 Nitrogen nucleophiles 5 5 3 Carbon nucleophiles 5 5 4 Bisulfite reaction 5 6 More complex reactions 6 Dialdehydes 7 Biochemistry 8 Examples of aldehydes 9 Examples of dialdehydes 10 Uses 11 Nomenclature 11 1 IUPAC names for aldehydes 11 2 Etymology 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksStructure and bonding EditAldehydes feature a carbon center that is connected by a double bond to oxygen and a single bond to hydrogen and single bond to a third substituent which is carbon or in the case of formaldehyde hydrogen The central carbon is often described as being sp2 hybridized The aldehyde group is somewhat polar The C O bond length is about 120 122 picometers 4 Physical properties and characterization EditAldehydes have properties that are diverse and that depend on the remainder of the molecule Smaller aldehydes are more soluble in water formaldehyde and acetaldehyde completely so The volatile aldehydes have pungent odors Aldehydes can be identified by spectroscopic methods Using IR spectroscopy they display a strong nCO band near 1700 cm 1 In their 1H NMR spectra the formyl hydrogen center absorbs near dH 9 5 to 10 which is a distinctive part of the spectrum This signal shows the characteristic coupling to any protons on the a carbon with a small coupling constant typically less than 3 0 Hz The 13C NMR spectra of aldehydes and ketones gives a suppressed weak but distinctive signal at dC 190 to 205 Applications and occurrence Edit Important aldehydes and related compounds The aldehyde group or formyl group is colored red From the left 1 formaldehyde and 2 its trimer 1 3 5 trioxane 3 acetaldehyde and 4 its enol vinyl alcohol 5 glucose pyranose form as a D glucopyranose 6 the flavorant cinnamaldehyde 7 retinal which forms with opsins photoreceptors and 8 the vitamin pyridoxal Naturally occurring aldehydes Edit Traces of many aldehydes are found in essential oils and often contribute to their favorable odours e g cinnamaldehyde cilantro and vanillin Possibly because of the high reactivity of the formyl group aldehydes are not common in several of the natural building blocks amino acids nucleic acids lipids Most sugars however are derivatives of aldehydes These aldoses exist as hemiacetals a sort of masked form of the parent aldehyde For example in aqueous solution only a tiny fraction of glucose exists as the aldehyde Synthesis EditThere are several methods for preparing aldehydes 2 but the dominant technology is hydroformylation 5 Illustrative is the generation of butyraldehyde by hydroformylation of propene H 2 CO CH 3 CH CH 2 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CHO displaystyle ce H2 CO CH3CH CH2 gt CH3CH2CH2CHO Oxidative routes Edit Aldehydes are commonly generated by alcohol oxidation In industry formaldehyde is produced on a large scale by oxidation of methanol 6 Oxygen is the reagent of choice being green and cheap In the laboratory more specialized oxidizing agents are used but chromium VI reagents are popular Oxidation can be achieved by heating the alcohol with an acidified solution of potassium dichromate In this case excess dichromate will further oxidize the aldehyde to a carboxylic acid so either the aldehyde is distilled out as it forms if volatile or milder reagents such as PCC are used 7 O CH 3 CH 2 9 OH CH 3 CH 2 8 CHO H 2 O displaystyle ce O CH3 CH2 9OH gt CH3 CH2 8CHO H2O Oxidation of primary alcohols to form aldehydes can be achieved under milder chromium free conditions by employing methods or reagents such as IBX acid Dess Martin periodinane Swern oxidation TEMPO or the Oppenauer oxidation citation needed Another oxidation route significant in industry is the Wacker process whereby ethylene is oxidized to acetaldehyde in the presence of copper and palladium catalysts acetaldehyde is also produced on a large scale by the hydration of acetylene On the laboratory scale a hydroxy acids are used as precursors to prepare aldehydes via oxidative cleavage 8 9 Specialty methods Edit Reaction name Substrate CommentOzonolysis Alkenes Ozonolysis of non fully substituted alkenes yield aldehydes upon a reductive work up Organic reduction Esters Reduction of an ester with diisobutylaluminium hydride DIBAL H or sodium aluminium hydride Rosenmund reaction Acyl chlorides Acyl chlorides selectively reduced to aldehydes Lithium tri t butoxyaluminium hydride LiAlH OtBu 3 is an effective reagent citation needed Wittig reaction Ketones A modified Wittig reaction using methoxymethylenetriphenylphosphine as a reagent Formylation reactions Nucleophilic arenes Various reactions for example the Vilsmeier Haack reaction Nef reaction Nitro compounds The acid hydrolysis of a primary nitro compound to form an aldehyde Kornblum oxidation Haloalkanes The oxidation of primary halide with dimethyl sulfoxide to form an aldehyde Zincke reaction Pyridines Zincke aldehydes formed in a reaction variation Stephen aldehyde synthesis Nitriles Hydrolysis of an iminium salt generated by tin II chloride and HCl to form an aldehyde Geminal halide hydrolysis Geminal dihalides Hydrolysis of primary geminal dihalides to yield aldehydes Meyers synthesis Oxazines Hemiaminal oxazine hydrolysis with water and oxalic acid to yield an aldehyde Hofmann rearrangement variation 10 11 unsaturated or a hydroxy amides Aldehydes via the hydrolysis of an intermediate carbamate McFadyen Stevens reaction Hydrazides Base catalyzed thermal decomposition of acylsulfonylhydrazides Biotransformation Alkenes Lyophilized cell cultures of Trametes hirsuta in the presence of oxygen 12 Common reactions EditAldehydes participate in many reactions 2 From the industrial perspective important reactions are a condensations e g to prepare plasticizers and polyols and b reduction to produce alcohols especially oxo alcohols From the biological perspective the key reactions involve addition of nucleophiles to the formyl carbon in the formation of imines oxidative deamination and hemiacetals structures of aldose sugars 2 Acid base reactions Edit Because of resonance stabilization of the conjugate base an a hydrogen in an aldehyde is weakly acidic with a pKa near 17 This acidification is attributed to i the electron withdrawing quality of the formyl center and ii the fact that the conjugate base an enolate anion delocalizes its negative charge The formyl proton itself does not readily undergo deprotonation Enolization Edit Aldehydes except those without an alpha carbon or without protons on the alpha carbon such as formaldehyde and benzaldehyde can exist in either the keto or the enol tautomer Keto enol tautomerism is catalyzed by either acid or base Usually the enol is the minority tautomer but it is more reactive The enolization typically reverses several times per second 13 Reduction Edit Main article Aldehyde reduction The formyl group can be readily reduced to a primary alcohol CH2OH Typically this conversion is accomplished by catalytic hydrogenation either directly or by transfer hydrogenation Stoichiometric reductions are also popular as can be effected with sodium borohydride Oxidation Edit The formyl group readily oxidizes to the corresponding carboxyl group COOH The preferred oxidant in industry is oxygen or air In the laboratory popular oxidizing agents include potassium permanganate nitric acid chromium VI oxide and chromic acid The combination of manganese dioxide cyanide acetic acid and methanol will convert the aldehyde to a methyl ester 14 Another oxidation reaction is the basis of the silver mirror test In this test an aldehyde is treated with Tollens reagent which is prepared by adding a drop of sodium hydroxide solution into silver nitrate solution to give a precipitate of silver I oxide and then adding just enough dilute ammonia solution to redissolve the precipitate in aqueous ammonia to produce Ag NH3 2 complex This reagent converts aldehydes to carboxylic acids without attacking carbon carbon double bonds The name silver mirror test arises because this reaction produces a precipitate of silver whose presence can be used to test for the presence of an aldehyde A further oxidation reaction involves Fehling s reagent as a test The Cu2 complex ions are reduced to a red brick coloured Cu2O precipitate If the aldehyde cannot form an enolate e g benzaldehyde addition of strong base induces the Cannizzaro reaction This reaction results in disproportionation producing a mixture of alcohol and carboxylic acid Nucleophilic addition reactions Edit Nucleophiles add readily to the carbonyl group In the product the carbonyl carbon becomes sp3 hybridized being bonded to the nucleophile and the oxygen center becomes protonated RCHO Nu RCH Nu O RCH Nu O H RCH Nu OH displaystyle begin aligned amp ce RCHO Nu gt RCH Nu O amp ce RCH Nu O H gt RCH Nu OH end aligned In many cases a water molecule is removed after the addition takes place in this case the reaction is classed as an addition elimination or addition condensation reaction There are many variations of nucleophilic addition reactions Oxygen nucleophiles Edit In the acetalisation reaction under acidic or basic conditions an alcohol adds to the carbonyl group and a proton is transferred to form a hemiacetal Under acidic conditions the hemiacetal and the alcohol can further react to form an acetal and water Simple hemiacetals are usually unstable although cyclic ones such as glucose can be stable Acetals are stable but revert to the aldehyde in the presence of acid Aldehydes can react with water to form hydrates R CH OH 2 These diols are stable when strong electron withdrawing groups are present as in chloral hydrate The mechanism of formation is identical to hemiacetal formation Nitrogen nucleophiles Edit In alkylimino de oxo bisubstitution a primary or secondary amine adds to the carbonyl group and a proton is transferred from the nitrogen to the oxygen atom to create a carbinolamine In the case of a primary amine a water molecule can be eliminated from the carbinolamine intermediate to yield an imine or its trimer a hexahydrotriazine This reaction is catalyzed by acid Hydroxylamine NH2OH can also add to the carbonyl group After the elimination of water this results in an oxime An ammonia derivative of the form H2NNR2 such as hydrazine H2NNH2 or 2 4 dinitrophenylhydrazine can also be the nucleophile and after the elimination of water resulting in the formation of a hydrazone which are usually orange crystalline solids This reaction forms the basis of a test for aldehydes and ketones 15 Carbon nucleophiles Edit The cyano group in HCN can add to the carbonyl group to form cyanohydrins R CH OH CN In this reaction the CN ion is the nucleophile that attacks the partially positive carbon atom of the carbonyl group The mechanism involves a pair of electrons from the carbonyl group double bond transferring to the oxygen atom leaving it single bonded to carbon and giving the oxygen atom a negative charge This intermediate ion rapidly reacts with H such as from the HCN molecule to form the alcohol group of the cyanohydrin Organometallic compounds such as organolithium reagents Grignard reagents or acetylides undergo nucleophilic addition reactions yielding a substituted alcohol group Related reactions include organostannane additions Barbier reactions and the Nozaki Hiyama Kishi reaction In the aldol reaction the metal enolates of ketones esters amides and carboxylic acids add to aldehydes to form b hydroxycarbonyl compounds aldols Acid or base catalyzed dehydration then leads to a b unsaturated carbonyl compounds The combination of these two steps is known as the aldol condensation The Prins reaction occurs when a nucleophilic alkene or alkyne reacts with an aldehyde as electrophile The product of the Prins reaction varies with reaction conditions and substrates employed Bisulfite reaction Edit Aldehydes characteristically form addition compounds with bisulfites RCHO HSO 3 RCH OH SO 3 displaystyle ce RCHO HSO3 gt RCH OH SO3 This reaction is used as a test for aldehydes and is useful for separation or purification of aldehydes 15 16 More complex reactions Edit Reaction name Product CommentWolff Kishner reduction Alkane If an aldehyde is converted to a simple hydrazone RCH NHNH2 and this is heated with a base such as KOH the terminal carbon is fully reduced to a methyl group The Wolff Kishner reaction may be performed as a one pot reaction giving the overall conversion RCH O RCH3 Pinacol coupling reaction Diol With reducing agents such as magnesiumWittig reaction Alkene Reagent an ylideTakai reaction Alkene Diorganochromium reagentCorey Fuchs reactions Alkyne Phosphine dibromomethylene reagentOhira Bestmann reaction Alkyne Reagent dimethyl diazomethyl phosphonateJohnson Corey Chaykovsky reaction Epoxide Reagent a sulfonium ylideOxo Diels Alder reaction Pyran Aldehydes can typically in the presence of suitable catalysts serve as partners in cycloaddition reactions The aldehyde serves as the dienophile component giving a pyran or related compound Hydroacylation Ketone In hydroacylation an aldehyde is added over an unsaturated bond to form a ketone Decarbonylation Alkane Catalysed by transition metalsDialdehydes EditMain article Dicarbonyl A dialdehyde is an organic chemical compound with two aldehyde groups The nomenclature of dialdehydes have the ending dial or sometimes dialdehyde Short aliphatic dialdehydes are sometimes named after the diacid from which they can be derived An example is butanedial which is also called succinaldehyde from succinic acid Biochemistry EditSome aldehydes are substrates for aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymes which metabolize aldehydes in the body There are toxicities associated with some aldehydes that are related to neurodegenerative disease heart disease and some types of cancer 17 Examples of aldehydes EditFormaldehyde methanal Acetaldehyde ethanal Propionaldehyde propanal Butyraldehyde butanal Isovaleraldehyde Benzaldehyde phenylmethanal Cinnamaldehyde Vanillin Tolualdehyde Furfural Retinaldehyde GlycolaldehydeExamples of dialdehydes EditGlyoxal Malondialdehyde Succindialdehyde Glutaraldehyde PhthalaldehydeUses EditOf all aldehydes formaldehyde is produced on the largest scale about 6000 000 tons per year It is mainly used in the production of resins when combined with urea melamine and phenol e g Bakelite It is a precursor to methylene diphenyl diisocyanate MDI a precursor to polyurethanes 6 The second main aldehyde is butyraldehyde of which about 2500 000 tons per year are prepared by hydroformylation It is the principal precursor to 2 ethylhexanol which is used as a plasticizer 18 Acetaldehyde once was a dominating product but production levels have declined to less than 1000 000 tons per year because it mainly served as a precursor to acetic acid which is now prepared by carbonylation of methanol Many other aldehydes find commercial applications often as precursors to alcohols the so called oxo alcohols which are used in detergents Some aldehydes are produced only on a small scale less than 1000 tons per year and are used as ingredients in flavours and perfumes such as Chanel No 5 These include cinnamaldehyde and its derivatives citral and lilial Nomenclature EditIUPAC names for aldehydes Edit The common names for aldehydes do not strictly follow official guidelines such as those recommended by IUPAC but these rules are useful IUPAC prescribes the following nomenclature for aldehydes 19 20 21 Acyclic aliphatic aldehydes are named as derivatives of the longest carbon chain containing the aldehyde group Thus HCHO is named as a derivative of methane and CH3CH2CH2CHO is named as a derivative of butane The name is formed by changing the suffix e of the parent alkane to al so that HCHO is named methanal and CH3CH2CH2CHO is named butanal In other cases such as when a CHO group is attached to a ring the suffix carbaldehyde may be used Thus C6H11CHO is known as cyclohexanecarbaldehyde If the presence of another functional group demands the use of a suffix the aldehyde group is named with the prefix formyl This prefix is preferred to methanoyl If the compound is a natural product or a carboxylic acid the prefix oxo may be used to indicate which carbon atom is part of the aldehyde group for example CHOCH2COOH is named 3 oxoethanoic acid If replacing the aldehyde group with a carboxyl group COOH would yield a carboxylic acid with a trivial name the aldehyde may be named by replacing the suffix ic acid or oic acid in this trivial name by aldehyde Etymology Edit The word aldehyde was coined by Justus von Liebig as a contraction of the Latin alcohol dehydrogenatus dehydrogenated alcohol 22 23 In the past aldehydes were sometimes named after the corresponding alcohols for example vinous aldehyde for acetaldehyde Vinous is from Latin vinum wine the traditional source of ethanol cognate with vinyl The term formyl group is derived from the Latin word formica ant This word can be recognized in the simplest aldehyde formaldehyde and in the simplest carboxylic acid formic acid See also EditEnol PseudoacidReferences Edit IUPAC Gold Book aldehydes a b c d Smith Michael B March Jerry 2007 Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions Mechanisms and Structure 6th ed New York Wiley Interscience ISBN 978 0 471 72091 1 Saul Patai ed 1966 The Carbonyl Group PATAI S Chemistry of Functional Groups Vol 1 John Wiley amp Sons doi 10 1002 9780470771051 ISBN 9780470771051 Jacob Zabicky ed 1970 The Carbonyl Group PATAI S Chemistry of Functional Groups Vol 2 John Wiley amp Sons doi 10 1002 9780470771228 ISBN 9780470771228 G Berthier J Serre 1966 General and Theoretical Aspects of the Carbonyl Group In Saul Patai ed The Carbonyl Group PATAI S Chemistry of Functional Groups Vol 1 John Wiley amp Sons pp 1 77 doi 10 1002 9780470771051 ch1 ISBN 9780470771051 Bertleff W Roeper M and Sava X 2003 Carbonylation in Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH Weinheim doi 10 1002 14356007 a05 217 pub2 a b Reuss G Disteldorf W Gamer A O and Hilt A 2005 Formaldehyde in Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH Weinheim doi 10 1002 14356007 a11 619 Ratcliffe R W 1988 Oxidation with the Chromium Trioxide Pyridine Complex Prepared in situ 1 Decanal Organic Syntheses Collective Volume vol 6 p 373 Ōeda Haruomi 1934 Oxidation of some a hydroxy acids with lead tetraacetate Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan 9 1 8 14 doi 10 1246 bcsj 9 8 Nwaukwa Stephen Keehn Philip 1982 Oxidative cleavage of a diols a diones a hydroxy ketones and a hydroxy and a keto acids with calcium hypochlorite Ca OCl 2 Tetrahedron Letters 23 31 3135 3138 doi 10 1016 S0040 4039 00 88578 0 Weerman R A 1913 Einwirkung von Natriumhypochlorit auf Amide ungesattigter Sauren Justus Liebigs Annalen der Chemie 401 1 1 20 doi 10 1002 jlac 19134010102 Everett Wallis Lane John 1946 The Hofmann Reaction Organic Reactions Vol 3 pp 267 306 doi 10 1002 0471264180 or003 07 ISBN 9780471005285 Sutton Peter Whittall John 2012 Practical Methods for Biocatalysis and Biotransformations 2 Chichester West Sussex John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 199 202 ISBN 9781119991397 aldehyde Tautomerism Britannica Corey Elias J Gilman Norman W Ganem B E 1968 New methods for the oxidation of aldehydes to carboxylic acids and esters J Am Chem Soc 90 20 5616 5617 doi 10 1021 ja01022a059 a b Shriner R L Hermann C K F Morrill T C Curtin D Y Fuson R C 1997 The Systematic Identification of Organic Compounds John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 59748 3 Furigay Maxwell H Boucher Maria M Mizgier Nikola A Brindle Cheyenne S 2018 04 02 Separation of Aldehydes and Reactive Ketones from Mixtures Using a Bisulfite Extraction Protocol Journal of Visualized Experiments 134 57639 doi 10 3791 57639 ISSN 1940 087X PMC 5933314 PMID 29658940 Chen Che Hong Ferreira Julio Cesar Batista Gross Eric R Rosen Daria Mochly 1 January 2014 Targeting Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 2 New Therapeutic Opportunities Physiological Reviews 94 1 1 34 doi 10 1152 physrev 00017 2013 PMC 3929114 PMID 24382882 Kohlpaintner C Schulte M Falbe J Lappe P and Weber J 2008 Aldehydes Aliphatic in Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH Weinheim doi 10 1002 14356007 a01 321 pub2 Short Summary of IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds Archived 2006 09 01 at the Wayback Machine web page University of Wisconsin Colleges accessed on line August 4 2007 R 5 6 1 Aldehydes thioaldehydes and their analogues A Guide to IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds recommendations 1993 IUPAC Commission on Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry Blackwell Scientific 1993 R 5 7 1 Carboxylic acids A Guide to IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Compounds recommendations 1993 IUPAC Commission on Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry Blackwell Scientific 1993 Liebig J 1835 Sur les produits de l oxidation de l alcool On the products of the oxidation of alcohol Annales de Chimie et de Physique 59 289 327 From page 290 Je le decrirai dans ce memoire sous le nom d aldehyde ce nom est forme de alcool dehydrogenatus I will describe it in this memoir by the name of aldehyde this name is formed from alcohol dehydrogenatus Crosland Maurice P 2004 Historical Studies in the Language of Chemistry Courier Dover Publications ISBN 9780486438023 External links Edit Look up aldehyde in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Aldehyde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aldehyde amp oldid 1144610077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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