로그인

Amides can undergo either acid-catalyzed hydrolysis or base-promoted hydrolysis through a typical nucleophilic acyl substitution. Each hydrolysis requires severe conditions.

Acid-catalyzed hydrolysis:

Hydrolysis of amides under acidic conditions yields carboxylic acids. Since the reaction occurs slowly, hydrolysis requires the conditions of heat.

The mechanism begins with the protonation of the carbonyl oxygen by the acid catalyst. The protonation makes the amide carbonyl carbon more electrophilic. Next, water acts as a nucleophile and attacks the carbonyl carbon to form a tetrahedral intermediate. Further, deprotonation of the tetrahedral intermediate gives a neutral tetrahedral addition intermediate. Subsequent protonation of the amino nitrogen converts the amino group into a better leaving group. In the next step, the carbonyl group is re-formed with the departure of ammonia as a leaving group. A final deprotonation step yields a carboxylic acid.

Figure1

The formation of ammonium ion drives the equilibrium favoring the product formation.

Base-promoted hydrolysis:

Base-promoted hydrolysis is another nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction, where hydroxide acts as a nucleophile. Amides undergo hydrolysis when heated under basic aqueous solutions to produce carboxylic acid.

The base-promoted mechanism involves a nucleophilic attack by the hydroxide ion at the amide carbonyl carbon to form a tetrahedral intermediate. In the second step, the carbonyl group is reconstructed with the departure of an amide ion as a leaving group. Next, deprotonation yields a carboxylate ion and ammonia. This step drives the reaction to completion, which pushes the equilibrium towards the product. A final step involves acidification of the carboxylate ion to give free acid.

Figure2

Tags
Amide HydrolysisAcid catalyzed HydrolysisBase promoted HydrolysisNucleophilic Acyl SubstitutionCarboxylic Acid FormationTetrahedral IntermediateAmmonia Leaving GroupProtonationDeprotonationCarbonyl CarbonElectrophilicNucleophileAmmonium IonHydroxide IonCarboxylate Ion

장에서 14:

article

Now Playing

14.23 : Amides to Carboxylic Acids: Hydrolysis

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.9K Views

article

14.1 : 카르복실산 유도체: 개요

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

3.1K Views

article

14.2 : 카르복실산 유도체의 명명법: Acid Halides, Esters 및 Acid Anhydrides

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

3.8K Views

article

14.3 : 카르복실산 유도체의 명명법: 아미드와 니트릴

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

3.6K Views

article

14.4 : 카르복실산 유도체의 구조

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.3K Views

article

14.5 : 카르복실산 유도체의 물리적 특성

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.4K Views

article

14.6 : 카르복실산 유도체의 산도와 염기도

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

3.3K Views

article

14.7 : Carboxylic Acid Derivatives의 분광법

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.2K Views

article

14.8 : 카르복실산 유도체의 상대 반응성

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.4K Views

article

14.9 : 카르복실산 유도체의 친핵성 아실 치환

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.7K Views

article

14.10 : 산 할로겐화물에서 카르복실산으로: 가수분해

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.4K Views

article

14.11 : 산성 할로겐화물에서 에스테르로: Alcoholysis

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.6K Views

article

14.12 : 산성 할로겐화물에서 아미드로: Aminolysis

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.5K Views

article

14.13 : 산 할로겐화물에서 알코올로: LiAlH4 환원

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.6K Views

article

14.14 : 산성 할로겐화물에서 알코올로: 그리나드 반응

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives

2.0K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유