Chapter 9 Ethers, Thiols, and Sulfides I. Naming and Physical Properties of Ethers A. Nomenclature 1) Name ethers as alkanes with an alkoxy substitutent 2) RO- = alkoxy substitutent 3) Choose the smallest part of the ether as the substituent 4) Common names: name the two R groups, followed by “ether” CH3CH2 O CH2CH3 Ethoxyethane Diethyl ether 5) O CH3CH2 O CH3 2-Ethoxy-2-methylpropane t-Butyl ethyl ether O CH2CH2CH2CH3 1-Methoxybutane Butyl methyl ether Cyclic Ethers a) O group is called and “oxa-” substituent: oxacycloalkanes b) Common names are prevalent 1 Oxacyclopropane Epoxide O O 1 1 Oxacyclopentane Tetrahydrofuran (THF) O 1 4 Oxacyclohexane Tetrahydropyran O 1,4-Dioxacyclohexane 1,4-Dioxane B. Physical Properties 1) Same molecular formula as Alcohol: CnH2n+2O 2) No Hydrogen Bonding is possible in R—O—R 3) Boiling Points are much lower than alcohols, more like haloalkanes 4) Water solubility much less than alcohols a) MeOMe and EtOEt have some water solubility b) Larger ethers are insoluble, very much like alkanes 5) Fairly unreactive, nonpolar solvents for organic reactions O C. O Metal Complexation by Crown Ethers O O 1) Crown Ether is a cyclic polyether: --(CH2CH2O)— 6-crown-2 2) Named as: (# of total atoms in ring)-Crown-(# of oxygens) O O 3) Oxygen lone pair can be donated to M+ to form complexes 12-crown-4 4) Allows dissolution of metal salts in organic solvents 5) Size of cavity dictates which metal fits: 18-crown-6 K+ > Rb+ >Na+ etc… O O O O O K+ + KMnO4 O O O 18-crown-6 O O + MnO4O O II. Williamson Ether Synthesis A. Alkoxides are good nucleophiles and strong bases 1) Reaction with primary, unhindered electrophile gives SN2 2) Reaction with non-primary or hindered electrophiles gives E2 RCH2I O-Na+ OCH2R Ether Williamson Ether Synthesis Alkene Br B. Cyclic Ethers from Intramolecular Reaction 1) Intermolecular reaction is between 2 separate molecules: A + B 2) Intramolecular reaction is between parts of same molecule: A - Br OH Br OH slower O O - C C + Br- HO OH 3) Ring size effects rate: k3 > k5 > k6 > k4 > k7 > k8 Oa) Ring strain says k3 slow, Entropy makes k3 fast Br b) k4 is slow because ring strain > entropy O 4) Intramolecular Williamson Ether Synthesis is Stereospecific a) Like E2 elimination, the leaving group must be anti to nucleophile b) Gauche leaving group won’t give product O- D H O- O D H H S anti Br H H H R H Br D gauche III. Other Ether Syntheses from Alcohols A. ROH plus Strong Mineral Acid 1) Remember that ROH plus HBr gives RBr because nucleophile is present 2) Protonation by mineral acid gives good leaving group (H2O) but does not give an interfering nucleophile ROH HBr H R O Br- RBr + H2O H ROH H2SO4 H R O H H ROH -H2O R O R -H+ R O R 3) 4) 5) Only makes symmetric ethers Follows SN2 for primary alcohols, SN1 for 2o and 3o alcohols Useful for making mixed 3o/1o ethers H+ B. CH3OH OH2+ OH OCH3 Ether Synthesis through Solvolysis of Haloalkanes or other Electrophiles 1) Solvolysis = nucleophilic substitution by solvent 2) Alcoholysis = solvolysis when solvent = ROH 3) Simple SN1 conditions can give complex ethers by solvolysis Br MeOH MeOH OMe OMe H IV. Reactions of Ethers A. Peroxide formation 1) Ethers open to oxygen can form expolosive peroxide compounds 2) Never use old ethers as solvents or reactants; store ethers properly 2 R O CH + O2 2 R O C O O C O R peroxide (explosive) B. Cleavage by Strong Acid 1) Reverse of Ether Synthesis by Strong Acid 2) Tertiary Ethers are most reactive to cleavage H + H O 3) O Secondary Ethers can be cleaved by SN2 or SN1 H + H O V. E1 OH + OH2 O OH + + -H+ OH OH2 Reactions of Oxacyclopropanes A. Nucleophilic Ring Opening 1) Ether Oxygen behaves as an intramolecular leaving group 2) Anionic Nucleophiles can open the oxacyclopropane ring by SN2 attack O O CH3S - H2O HO - SCH3 SCH3 3) 4) 5) Alkoxide usually a poor leaving group (but it doesn’t really leave here) Driving force is opening of the strained 3-membered ring For unsymmetric oxacyclopropanes, the Nu attacks at the least subst. C O- SN 2 O CH3SCH3 6) B. CH3 CH3S OH H2O CH3S CH3 Regioselectivity = reaction at only one of multiple sites of a molecule Alcohols from Oxacyclopropanes 1) LiAlH4 attacks epoxides, but not any other ethers O LiAlH4 + CH3 CH3 CH3 D 2) SN 2 inverts CH3 D H OH CH3 CH3 Alkylmetal reagents also react with epoxides only among the ethers O CH3CH2MgBr + CH3 D CH3 CH3 SN 2 inverts CH3 D CH3CH2 OH CH3 CH3 C. Acid Catalyzed Oxacyclopropane Ring Opening 1) Mechanism O H CH3 CH3 H O + 2) 3) 4) 5) H H H H CH3 CH3 O = H H H HO CH3 CH3 Nu H H Nu Regioselective and Stereospecific for Nu- attack at the Most Hindered C Partial C+ forms only on most hindered carbon Not a full carbocation, because we see stereospecific inversion (SN2, not SN1) Now we have tools to add Nu at most (H+, Nu) or least (Nu-) carbon of an epoxide VI. Sulfur Analogues of Alcohols and Ethers A. CH3 CH3 Nomenclature 1) R—OH = Alcohol R—SH = Thiol a) Name as alkanethiol CH3SH = methanethiol b) Name as a mercapto- substituent HSCH2CH2OH = 2-mercaptoethanol OH > SH priority 2) R—O—R = Ether R—S—R = Sulfide (common name = thioether) a) Name like common names for ethers i. CH3SCH2CH3 = ethyl methyl sulfide (methylthioethane) ii. (CH3)3CSCH3 = t-butyl methyl sulfide iii. H2S = hydrogen sulfide iv. RS– substituent is called alkythio b) RS- anion is called alkanethiolate anion: CH3CH2S- = ethanethiolate B. Properties of Thiols and Sulfides 1) RSH doesn’t Hydrogen bond very well (S is too large to match H) 2) Boiling points are lower than the analogous alcohols 3) RS—H bond is weak, so thiols are more acidic than alcohols C. Reactivity of Thiols and Sulfides 1) RS- is more nucleophilic than RO- due to larger size 2) Synthesis of thiols and sulfides - - R'SR + X HS- RSH + X- R'S RX 3) Use hydroxide to deprotonate RSH NaOH CH3CH2Br CH3SH CH3S- 4) Formation of Sulfonium Ion = R3S+ as a good leaving group CH3SCH3 5) CH3CH2Br - (CH3)2SCH2CH3 sulfonium ion KMnO4 oxidation CH3SCH3 + HOCH2CH3 O CH3 S OH O Oxidation of Sulfides H2O2 RSR Sulfide 7) OH Valence Shell Expansion due to d orbitals is common for S compounds CH3SH 6) CH3SCH2CH3 + Br- O RSR Sulfoxide Disulfide formation I2 2 RSH RS 1. Li, NH3 + 2. H , H2O H2O2 O RSR O Sulfone SR Disulfide