Reactions of Alcohols (Cambridge (CIE) AS Chemistry)
Revision Note
Reactions of Alcohols
Alcohols are reactive molecules which undergo a wide range of reactions
Combustion of alcohols
Alcohols react with oxygen in the air when ignited and undergo complete combustion to form carbon dioxide and water
Alcohol + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water
The complete combustion of ethanol
Complete combustion of alcohols produces carbon dioxide and water
Substitution of alcohols
In the substitution of alcohols, a hydroxy group (-OH) is replaced by a halogen to form an halogenoalkane
The substitution of the alcohol group for a halogen can be achieved by reacting the alcohol with:
HX (rather than using HBr, KBr is reacted with H2SO4 or H3PO4 to make HBr that will then react with the alcohol)
PCl3 and heat
PCl5 at room temperature
SOCl2
Substitution of alcohols
The substitution of alcohols produces halogenoalkanes
Reaction with Na
When an alcohol reacts with a reactive metal such as sodium (Na), the oxygen-hydrogen bond in the hydroxy group breaks
Though the reaction is less vigorous than sodium reacting with water, hydrogen gas is given off and a basic compound (alkoxide) is formed
If the excess ethanol is evaporated off after the reaction a white crystalline solid of sodium alkoxide is left
Alcohol + sodium → sodium alkoxide + hydrogen
The longer the hydrocarbon chain in the alcohol, the less vigorous the reaction becomes
The reaction of ethanol with sodium metal
Alcohols react with Na to form a basic sodium alkoxide salt and hydrogen gas
Oxidation of alcohols
Primary alcohols can be oxidised to form aldehydes which can undergo further oxidation to form carboxylic acids
Secondary alcohols can be oxidised to form ketones only
Tertiary alcohols do not undergo oxidation
The oxidising agents of alcohols include acidified K2Cr2O7 or acidified KMnO4
Acidified potassium dichromate(VI), K2Cr2O7, is an orange oxidising agent
Acidified means that that the potassium dichromate(VI) is in a solution of dilute acid (such as dilute sulfuric acid)
For potassium dichromate(VI) to act as an oxidising agent, it itself needs to be reduced
This reduction requires hydrogen (H+) ions which are provided by the acidic medium
When alcohols are oxidised the orange dichromate ions (Cr2O72-) are reduced to green Cr3+ ions
Acidified potassium manganate(VII), KMnO4, is a purple oxidising agent
As with acidified K2Cr2O7 the potassium manganate(VII) is in an acidic medium to allow reduction of potassium manganate(VII) to take place
When alcohols are oxidised, the purple manganate ions (MnO4-) are reduced to colourless Mn2+ ions
Warm primary alcohol is added to the oxidising agent
The formed aldehyde has a lower boiling point than the alcohol reactant so it can be distilled off as soon as it forms
If the aldehyde is not distilled off, further refluxing with excess oxidising agent will oxidise it to a carboxylic acid
Since ketones cannot be further oxidised, the ketone product does not need to be distilled off straight away after it has been formed
The reflux setup to convert an alcohol to an aldehyde
The oxidation of ethanol by acidified K2Cr2O7 forms ethanal by distillation and ethanoic acid by refluxing
Oxidation of propan-2-ol by acidified K2Cr2O7
The oxidation of secondary alcohols by acidified K2Cr2O7 forms a ketone, under distillation
Dehydration of alcohols
Alcohols can also undergo dehydration to form alkenes
Dehydration is a reaction in which a water molecule is removed from a larger molecule
A dehydration reaction is a type of elimination reaction
Alcohol vapour is passed over a hot catalyst of aluminium oxide (Al2O3) powder OR pieces of porous pot or pumice as well as concentrated acid can be used as catalysts
Dehydration of ethanol
Dehydration of ethanol using aluminium oxide as a catalyst forms ethene gas, which can be collected over water
Esterification of Alcohols
Esterification is a condensation reaction between a carboxylic acid and an alcohol to form an ester and a water molecule
For esterification to take place, the carboxylic acid and alcohol are heated under reflux with a strong acid catalyst (such as H2SO4 or H3PO4)
Carboxylic acid + alcohol → ester + water
The reaction is reversible so an equilibrium mixture can be established with all the reactants and products
Esters have sweet, fruity smells
Example esterification reaction
Esterification of ethanol and ethanoic acid using a strong acid catalyst to form ethyl ethanoate and water
Examiner Tips and Tricks
The first part of an ester’s name comes from the alcohol, whereas the second part comes from the carboxylic acid
So, if ethanol and propanoic acid react together, this will make the ester ethyl propanoate
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