Post on 10-Jan-2016
description
ESTE
RS
AN EST
ER IS
SIM
PLY
AN OXYG
EN B
ONDED
BETW
EEN T
WO H
YDROCARBON A
TOM
S.
{
GENERAL FORMULA
OR-C
O-R’Alkyl Group or Aryl Group
Carbonyl Group{
The R groups can be short-chain or long –chain aliphatic (alkyl) or aromatic (aryl) groups, saturated or unsaturated.
WHAT ARE ESTERS
Esters are derivatives of carboxylic acids in which the –OH of the carboxyl group has been replaced by an –OR from an alcohol.
Esters contain a carbonyl group and an ether link to the carbonyl carbon.
MORE ABOUT ESTERS
Although the molecules are polar, they cannot form hydrogen bonds with one another because they do not contain hydrogen attached to oxygen or another electronegative atom.
ESTERIFICATION
R–C
OH
O
+ RO H O
R
OR–C + H -
OH
H+
Carboxylic Alcohol Carboxylate Water Acid EsterEsters mainly result from the condensation (water producing reaction) of a carboxylic acid and an alcohol. The process is called esterification. This reaction can be catalyzed by the presence of H+ ions. Sulphuric acid, (H2SO4) is often used as a catalyst for this reaction.
PROPERTIES
They have much lower boiling points than the strongly hydrogen-bonded carboxylic acids from which they are derived from.
The low formula-mass esters are somewhat soluble in water, but esters containing more than four or five carbons have very limited solubility.
NAMING
The format is as follows:
(alkane further from carbonyl) (alkane closest to carbonyl) (parent chain)
Step 1: Identify the alkyl group attached to the oxygen atom.
In this case, it is methyl attached to the oxygen because there is only one carbon.
General Formula
Step 2: Determine the acid present, and change the stem name from –oic to –oate.
Methyl Methanoate
The acid attached is methanol, only have one carbon. Creating methanoate.
EXAMPLE #1
1) First you identify the alkyl group attached to the oxygen.
2) Identify the alkane that attaches the carbon atoms.
3) Replace the –oic ending with an –oate ending
4) NOTE: You name the structure backwards from how its written.
Ethyl Ethanoate
EXAMPLE #2
Methyl Ethanoate
1) Name the alkane farthest from theCarbonyl group first (Methyl)
2) Name the alkane attaching the Carbons (or carbonyl group) (Ethyl)
3) Change the ending to –oate.
MORE EXAMPLES
Many Esters give blueberries, pineapples, apples, pears, bananas and many other fruits there characteristic aromas.
RaspberriesHCOOCH2CH3 ethyl methanoate (IUPAC) ethyl formate (common)
Pineapples CH3CH2CH2COOCH2CH3 ethyl butanoate
(IUPAC) ethyl butyrate
(common)