
Carbonyl group
In
organic chemistry, a 'carbonyl group' is a
functional group composed of a
carbon atom double-bonded to an
oxygen atom : C=O.
The term carbonyl can also refer to
carbon monoxide as a
ligand in an
inorganic or
organometallic complex (a
metal carbonyl, e.g.
nickel carbonyl); in this situation, carbon is
triple-bonded to oxygen : C≡O.
The remainder of this article concerns itself with the
organic chemistry definition of 'carbonyl'.
A carbonyl group characterizes the following types of compounds (where -CO denotes a C=O carbonyl group):
Reactivity
'''Oxygen''' is more
electronegative than carbon, and thus pulls electron density away from carbon to increase the bond's
polarity. Therefore, the carbonyl carbon becomes
electrophilic, and thus more reactive with
nucleophiles. Also, the electronegative oxygen can react with an electrophile; for example a proton in an acidic solution or other Lewis Acid.'
The
alpha hydrogen in a carbonyl compound is much more acidic (~10
30 times more acidic) than a typical CH bond. For example the pK
a values of
acetaldehyde and
acetone are 16.7 and 19, respectively.
[1]
Amides are the most stable of the carbonyl couplings due to their high resonance stabilization between the Nitrogen-Carbon and Carbon-Oxygen bonds.
Carbonyl groups can be
reduced by reaction with
hydride reagents such as NaBH
4 and LiAlH
4, and by
organometallic reagents such as
organolithium reagents and
Grignard reagents.
Other important reactions include:
★
Wolff-Kishner reduction
★
Clemmensen reduction
★ Conversion into
thioacetals
★
Hydration to
hemiacetals and
hemiketals, and then to
acetals and
ketals
★ Reaction with
ammonia and primary
amines to form
imines
★ Reaction with
hydroxylamines to form
oximes
★ Reaction with
cyanide anion to form
cyanohydrins
★ Oxidation with oxaziridines to
acyloins
★ Reaction with
Tebbe's reagent and
phosphonium ylides to
alkenes.
★
Perkins reaction
★
Tishchenko reaction
★
Aldol condensation
★
Cannizaro's reaction
α,β-Unsaturated carbonyl compounds
'α,β-Unsaturated carbonyl compounds' are an important class of carbonyl compounds with the general structure C
β=C
α−C=O. In these compounds the carbonyl group is
conjugated with an
alkene (hence the
adjective unsaturated), from which they derive special properties. Examples of unsaturated carbonyls are
acrolein,
mesityl oxide,
acrylic acid and
maleic acid. Unsaturated carbonyls can be prepared in the laboratory in an
aldol reaction and in the
Perkin reaction.
The carbonyl group, be it an
aldehyde or
acid, draws electrons away from the alkene and the alkene group in unsaturated carbonyls are therefore deactived towards an
electrophile such as
bromine or
hydrochloric acid. As a general rule with unsymmetric electrophiles hydrogen attaches itself at the α position in an
electrophilic addition.
On the other hand, these compounds are activated towards
nucleophiles in
nucleophilic addition.
Spectroscopy
★
Infrared spectroscopy: the C=O double bond absorbs
infrared light at
wavenumbers between approximately 1680–1750 cm
−1. This absorption is known as the "carbonyl stretch" when displayed on an infrared absorption spectrum.
★
Nuclear magnetic resonance: the C=O double-bond exhibits different resonances depending on surrounding atoms, generally a downfield shift. The
13C NMR of a carbonyl carbon is in the range of 160-220 ppm.
★
Mass spectrometry
Other organic carbonyl compounds
★
Urea
★
Carbamates
Inorganic carbonyl compounds
★
Carbon dioxide
★
Carbonyl sulfide
★
Phosgene
See also
★
Organic chemistry
References
★ William Reusch. (2004)
Aldehydes and Ketones Retrieved 23 May 2005.
★ ILPI. (2005)
The MSDS Hyperglossary- Anhydride.
Further reading
★ L.G. Wade, Jr. ''Organic Chemistry, 5th ed.''
Prentice Hall, 2002. ISBN 0-13-033832-X
★ The Frostburg State University Chemistry Department.
Organic Chemistry Help (2000).
★ Advanced Chemistry Development, Inc.
IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (1997).
★ William Reusch.
VirtualText of Organic Chemistry (2004).
★ Purdue Chemistry Department
[1] (retrieved Sep 2006). Includes water solubility data.