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10.3 : Acidity and Basicity of Alcohols and Phenols

Like water, alcohols are weak acids and bases. This is attributed to the polarization of the O–H bond making the hydrogen partially positive. Moreover, the electron pairs on the oxygen atom of alcohol make it both basic and nucleophilic. Protonation of an alcohol converts hydroxide, a poor leaving group, into water—a good one. The two acid–base equilibria corresponding to ethanol are depicted below.

Chemical equilibrium showing proton transfer, equation, acid-base reaction, pK values 15.9, 15.7.

Figure 1. Loss of proton

Acid-base equilibrium, chemical equation, showing pKa values, with Lewis structures and reaction arrows.

Figure 2. Gain of proton

Methanol (pKa = 15.5) is the only alcohol that is slightly stronger than water (pKa = 15.7). Ethanol (pKa = 15.9), tert-butanol (pKa = 18.0), and others are weaker acids. However, all alcohols are stronger acids than terminal alkynes, and they are much stronger than hydrogen, ammonia, and alkanes.

Chemical reaction sequence diagram showing conversion from H2O to RH through ROH, R≡H, H2, NH3.

Figure 3. Relative acidity

Since alcohols are weaker acids than water, their conjugate base alkoxide ions are stronger bases than the hydroxide ion. Alcohol can be converted into metal alkoxide using strong bases such as sodium/potassium hydride or sodium/potassium metal, which react violently but controllably with alcohol. When the alkyl substitution is bulky, the alkoxide ion is not solvated enough due to the steric effect, leading to less stabilization. Additionally, destabilization is favored by inductive effects. Consequently, the equilibrium lies predominantly towards alcohol.

Alcohols can also act as a base and accept protons from strong acids. Notably, conjugate bases of compounds with higher pKa than an alcohol will deprotonate that alcohol.

Radical reaction mechanism showing chemical transformations: R∙, NH₂, H∙, R≡, RO∙, HO⁻.

Figure 4. Relative basicity

Phenols are more acidic than alcohols. The conjugate base of a phenol is a phenoxide or phenolate ion. Resonance stabilization of the phenoxide ion coupled with the polar effect of the benzene ring enhances the acidity of phenols by eight orders of magnitude (100,000,000 times) over cyclohexanol. Therefore, phenol does not need to be deprotonated with a base as strong as sodium hydride. Instead, it can be deprotonated by hydroxide, unlike an alcohol.

Although phenol is a million-fold higher in acidity than ethanol, it is a hundred thousand-fold less acidic than acetic acid. Their relative acid–base properties can be used to separate each other from a mixture. When an ether solution of a mixture of alcohol and phenol is extracted with dilute sodium hydroxide, phenol gets completely partitioned into the aqueous phase as its sodium salt, while alcohol stays in the ether layer. On the other hand, dilute sodium bicarbonate is used to extract phenol and carboxylic acid from an ether solution of their mixture. Carboxylic acid gets quantitatively converted into its sodium salt and gets extracted from water while phenol remains in the ether phase.

Acid-base equilibrium diagram, chemical equations, stronger and weaker acids or bases comparison.

Figure 5. Acid–base equilibria of phenol

A phenoxide ion can be stabilized by delocalization of the oxygen's negative charge on the benzene ring. This is reinforced by electron-withdrawing functional groups like nitro, halide, etc. A substantial change in acidity is noted in phenols with an electron-withdrawing substituent, like a nitro group. An ortho- or para-nitro group stabilizes the phenoxide ion by delocalizing the negative charge on its own oxygen atoms. On the other hand, a meta-nitro group, being not directly conjugated to the phenoxide oxygen, stabilizes the phenolate ion to a lesser extent. Therefore, m-nitrophenol (pKa = 8.4) is more acidic than phenol but less acidic than o- or p-nitrophenol (pKa = 7.2). This also explains the extremely high acidity of 2,4-⁠dinitrophenol (pKa = 4.0) and 2,4,6-trinitrophenol (pKa = 0.4).

Table 1. The acidity constants (pKa) of acids (blue) and their conjugate bases.

Compound Acid Conjugate base pKa
Hydrogen chloride HCl molecule illustration; chemical bonding structure; covalent bond depiction; educational diagram. Chloride ion symbol Cl^-. Chemical notation, ionic charge, molecular representation. −6.30
Nitrophenol Chemical structure diagram of 4-nitrophenol, static compound, aromatic ring with OH and NO2 groups. Chemical structure diagram of p-nitrophenolate, aromatic compound with nitro and phenolate groups. 7.07
Phenol Phenol structure, chemical formula, benzene ring with hydroxyl group, molecular diagram. Phenoxide ion structure; chemical diagram, aromatic ring, negatively charged oxygen atom. 9.89
m-Cresol Phenolic compound structure, 4-methylphenol chemical formula diagram, organic chemistry. Chemical structure, para-cresol, aromatic ring, -OH group, CH3 group, molecular formula diagram. 10.1
2,2,2-Trifluoroethanol Chemical structure of 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol molecule, organic chemistry concept, molecule diagram. Fluoroethanol chemical structure diagram, molecular formula, organic compound visualization. 12.0
Water Water molecule structure diagram; H2O with two hydrogen atoms bonded to oxygen atom, chemical bond. Hydroxide ion formula "H–O⁻", chemical structure, representation in chemistry diagrams. 15.7
Ethanol Ethyl alcohol molecular structure, chemical formula diagram showing -OH functional group. Ethoxide ion structure, chemical formula depiction, molecular geometry diagram. 15.9
Cyclohexanol Cyclohexanol molecular structure diagram, C6H11OH, organic chemistry concept. Cyclohexanone molecular structure, chemical formula diagram, organic chemistry education. 16.0

Tags

AcidityBasicityAlcoholsPhenolsPolarizationO H BondWeak AcidsWeak BasesNucleophilicProtonationEquilibriaPKaMethanolEthanolTert butanolAlkynesHydrogenAmmoniaAlkanesAlkoxide IonsMetal AlkoxideStrong BasesSodium potassium HydrideSodium potassium MetalSteric EffectSolvationInductive Effects

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