Accedi

Similar to water, alcohols can add to the carbonyl carbon of the aldehydes and ketones. The addition of one molecule of alcohol to the carbonyl compound forms the hemiacetal or half acetal. As depicted below, in a hemiacetal, the carbon is directly linked to an OH and OR group.

Figure1

As alcohols are poor nucleophiles, the formation of hemiacetals is very slow under neutral conditions. The reaction rate is enhanced by using either basic or acidic reaction media.

The acid catalyst, such as sulfuric acid or p-toluenesulfonic acid, interacts with the alcohol by donating a proton. This generates a protonated alcohol that acts as the active species and subsequently protonates the carbonyl oxygen, making the carbonyl carbon strongly electrophilic. Now, an alcohol molecule attacks this carbonyl carbon forming an oxonium cation. The loss of a proton from oxonium cation leads to the formation of hemiacetals.

Figure2

On the other hand, in the presence of a base, the alcohol undergoes a deprotonation reaction, forming the negatively charged alkoxide anion. This highly basic anion then attacks the carbonyl carbon. The intermediate form will abstract a proton from another alcohol molecule to form the hemiacetal.

The cyclic hemiacetals are formed when the hydroxyl and carbonyl groups are present on the same molecule. The naturally occurring simple carbohydrates generally exist in cyclic hemiacetal form. For instance, the α and β anomeric forms of D-glucose are in the hemiacetal form.

Tags

AldehydesKetonesAlcoholsHemiacetal FormationNucleophilesAcid CatalystsBasic ConditionsOxonium CationAlkoxide AnionCyclic HemiacetalsCarbohydratesGlucose Anomers

Dal capitolo 12:

article

Now Playing

12.12 : Aldehydes and Ketones with Alcohols: Hemiacetal Formation

Aldehydes and Ketones

5.1K Visualizzazioni

article

12.1 : Strutture di aldeidi e chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

7.5K Visualizzazioni

article

12.2 : IUPAC Nomenclatura delle aldeidi

Aldehydes and Ketones

5.1K Visualizzazioni

article

12.3 : IUPAC Nomenclatura dei chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

5.2K Visualizzazioni

article

12.4 : Nomi comuni di aldeidi e chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

3.3K Visualizzazioni

article

12.5 : Spettroscopia IR e UV-Vis di aldeidi e chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

5.0K Visualizzazioni

article

12.6 : Spettroscopia NMR e spettrometria di massa di aldeidi e chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

3.5K Visualizzazioni

article

12.7 : Preparazione di Aldeidi e Chetoni da Alcoli, Alcheni e Alchini

Aldehydes and Ketones

3.3K Visualizzazioni

article

12.8 : Preparazione di Aldeidi e Chetoni da Nitrili e Acidi Carbossilici

Aldehydes and Ketones

3.2K Visualizzazioni

article

12.9 : Preparazione di Aldeidi e Chetoni da Derivati dell'Acido Carbossilico

Aldehydes and Ketones

2.4K Visualizzazioni

article

12.10 : Addizione nucleofila al gruppo carbonilico: meccanismo generale

Aldehydes and Ketones

4.6K Visualizzazioni

article

12.11 : Aldeidi e chetoni con acqua: formazione di idrati

Aldehydes and Ketones

2.9K Visualizzazioni

article

12.13 : Gruppi di protezione per aldeidi e chetoni: Introduzione

Aldehydes and Ketones

6.0K Visualizzazioni

article

12.14 : Acetali e tioacetali come gruppi protettivi per aldeidi e chetoni

Aldehydes and Ketones

3.8K Visualizzazioni

article

12.15 : Aldeidi e chetoni con HCN: panoramica sulla formazione di cianoidrina

Aldehydes and Ketones

2.5K Visualizzazioni

See More

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati