Carboxylic Acids (AQA GCSE Chemistry)

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Carboxylic acids

  • Carboxylic acids are a homologous series of compounds that have the functional group -COOH
  • They have similar chemical properties

Carboxylic acid functional group

Carboxylic acid

Diagram of the general structure of a carboxylic acid. The R- represents a varying hydrocarbon chain

Examiner Tip

The carbon atom in the -COOH functional group is counted as part of the molecule and not just the functional group. E.g. CH3CH2CH2COOH has 4 carbon atoms so is called butanoic acid, not propanoic acid.

Carboxylic acid structure

  • The names and structure of the first four carboxylic acids are shown below
  • In terms of naming, the same system is used as for alkanes and alkenes, with the final ‘e’ being replaced with ‘oic’ and then the word acid

Carboxylic acid structure

Carboxylic Acids from methanoic acid to butanoic acid

The structures and formulae of the first four carboxylic acids

Reactions of carboxylic acids

Reactions with water

  • Carboxylic acids are soluble in water
  • When carboxylic acids are placed in water, they dissolve
  • A weakly acidic solution is formed

Reactions with carbonates

  • In the reaction with carbonates a metal salt, water and carbon dioxide gas are produced
  • For example in reaction with potassium carbonate the salt potassium butanoate is formed by reaction with butanoic acid:

butanoic acid + potassium carbonate → potassium butanoate + water + carbon dioxide

Reactions with alcohols: Esterification

  • Alcohols and carboxylic acids react to make esters in esterification reactions in the presence of an acid catalyst, usually concentrated sulfuric acid
  • Esters are compounds with the functional group R-COO-R
  • Esters are sweet smelling oily liquids used in food flavourings and perfumes
  • They are volatile, meaning they vapourise easily
  • Ethanoic acid will react with ethanol in the presence of concentrated sulfuric acid (catalyst) to form ethyl ethanoate:

CH3COOH + C2H5OH → CH3COOC2H5 + H2O

Esterification

Diagram to show the formation of ethyl ethanoate from ethanol and ethanoic acid

Diagram showing the formation of ethyl ethanoate

Examiner Tip

You are not expected to be able to write balanced equations for the reactions of carboxylic acids- they are included here for background information.

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Stewart

Author: Stewart

Expertise: Chemistry Lead

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Exam Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.