Properties of Carboxylic Acids
- Carboxylic acid is the name given to the family of compounds that contain the carboxyl functional group, -COOH
- The general formula of a carboxylic acid is CnH2n+1COOH which can be shortened to just RCOOH
- (In some countries, this family is also called alkanoic acid)
- The nomenclature of carboxylic acid follows the pattern alkan + oic acid, e.g. propanoic acid
- There is no need to use numbers in the name as the carboxyl group, COOH, is always on the number 1 carbon atom
Carboxylic Acids Examples Table
Weak Acids
- Carboxylic acids with fewer than six carbon atoms per molecule are water-soluble
- This is because water molecules can hydrogen-bond with the functional group
- In aqueous solution they are only slightly ionised, to give low concentrations of hydronium ions and alkanoate ions (often called carboxylate ions)
Carboxylic acids are weak acids that do not fully dissociate in water, the position of the equilibrium lies to the left
- This partial ionisation in solution means that carboxylic acids are weak acids