Alcohols, Phenols & Ethers
Apply concepts from Alcohols, Phenols & Ethers to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.
Concept Core
Alcohols, phenols, and ethers are oxygen-containing organic compounds central to NEET organic chemistry. Their classification, reactivity differences, and named reactions form the core of this session.
Alcohols are classified as 1 degree (RCH2OH, e.g., ethanol CCO), 2 degree (R2CHOH, e.g., propan-2-ol CC(O)C), and 3 degree (R3COH, e.g., 2-methylpropan-2-ol ). Preparation methods include acid-catalyzed hydration of alkenes (Markovnikov product), Grignard reaction (RMgX + carbonyl → alcohol after hydrolysis), and reduction of aldehydes/ketones (NaBH4 or LiAlH4) or carboxylic acids (LiAlH4 only — NaBH4 is too weak).
Dehydration to alkenes follows Saytzeff's rule: ROH + conc. H2SO4 at 443 K → more substituted alkene (major). Ease of dehydration: 3 degree > 2 degree > 1 degree (more stable carbocation intermediate). The oxidation ladder is crucial: 1 degree alcohol →(PCC, mild) aldehyde →(KMnO4 or K2Cr2O7, strong) carboxylic acid; 2 degree alcohol → ketone (with any oxidizing agent); 3 degree alcohol → resistant to oxidation (requires C-C bond cleavage). PCC (pyridinium chlorochromate) is the mild, selective reagent that STOPS at the aldehyde stage.
The Lucas test distinguishes alcohol types using ZnCl2/conc. HCl: 3 degree → immediate turbidity (within 5 minutes, SN1 — stable carbocation); 2 degree → turbidity in 5-20 minutes; 1 degree → no turbidity at room temperature (SN2 too slow without heating).
Phenol (, pKa ~10) is significantly more acidic than alcohols (pKa ~16-18) because the phenoxide ion is stabilized by resonance — the negative charge delocalizes over the benzene ring through five resonance structures. Electron-withdrawing groups (-NO2) increase acidity (p-nitrophenol is more acidic than phenol), while electron-donating groups (-CH3) decrease it. Phenol undergoes electrophilic substitution more easily than benzene: -OH is a strong activating o/p director. Bromine water (Br2/H2O) directly gives 2,4,6-tribromophenol (white precipitate) WITHOUT any Lewis acid catalyst — the -OH group activates the ring sufficiently.
Named Reactions of Phenol: Kolbe's reaction (Kolbe-Schmitt): C6H5O-Na+ + CO2 →(125 deg C, 4-7 atm) sodium salicylate →(H3O+) salicylic acid (). Reimer-Tiemann reaction: C6H5OH + CHCl3 + NaOH → salicylaldehyde (, ortho-hydroxybenzaldehyde); intermediate is dichlorocarbene (:CCl2).
Ethers: Williamson synthesis is the key preparation: R-O-Na+ + R'-X → R-O-R' + NaX. This is an SN2 reaction, so always use a 1 degree alkyl halide (2 degree/3 degree give elimination instead). The alkoxide provides the oxygen; the halide provides the carbon. Ether cleavage by excess HI: R-O-R' + HI → RI + R'OH, then R'OH + HI → R'I + H2O. For unsymmetrical ethers, the smaller alkyl group preferentially forms the iodide (SN2 path).
The key testable concept is that PCC selectively oxidizes 1 degree alcohol to aldehyde (stops there), while KMnO4/K2Cr2O7 oxidize all the way to carboxylic acid — and that Williamson synthesis requires a 1 degree halide to avoid elimination.
Key Testable Concept
The key testable concept is that PCC selectively oxidizes 1 degree alcohol to aldehyde (stops there), while KMnO4/K2Cr2O7 oxidize all the way to carboxylic acid — and that Williamson synthesis requires a 1 degree halide to avoid elimination.
Comparison Tables
A) Lucas Test
| Alcohol Type | Time to Turbidity | Mechanism | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 degree | Immediate (within 5 min) | SN1 | Stable 3 degree carbocation forms readily |
| 2 degree | 5-20 minutes | SN1 (slower) | Less stable 2 degree carbocation |
| 1 degree | No turbidity at RT | SN2 (too slow) | Primary carbocation too unstable for SN1 |
B) Oxidation of Alcohols
| Alcohol Type | Reagent (mild) | Product | Reagent (strong) | Final Product |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 degree (RCH2OH) | PCC | Aldehyde (RCHO) | KMnO4/K2Cr2O7 | Carboxylic acid (RCOOH) |
| 2 degree (R2CHOH) | PCC or KMnO4 | Ketone (R2CO) | KMnO4/K2Cr2O7 | Ketone (no further) |
| 3 degree (R3COH) | — | No reaction | — | Resistant (needs C-C cleavage) |
C) Named Reactions of Phenol
| Reaction | Reagent | Conditions | Product (SMILES) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kolbe (Kolbe-Schmitt) | CO2 then H3O+ | 125 deg C, 4-7 atm on sodium phenoxide | Salicylic acid () |
| Reimer-Tiemann | CHCl3 + NaOH | Reflux with phenol | Salicylaldehyde () |
| Bromination | Br2/H2O | No catalyst needed | 2,4,6-tribromophenol (white ppt) |
| Esterification | CH3COCl | Room temperature | Phenyl acetate () |
D) Phenol Acidity — Substituent Effects
| Substituent | Effect on pKa | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| -NO2 (para) | Decreases (more acidic) | -M effect stabilizes phenoxide by further delocalizing charge |
| -Cl (para) | Slightly decreases | -I effect stabilizes phenoxide |
| -CH3 (para) | Increases (less acidic) | +I effect destabilizes phenoxide |
| -OCH3 (para) | Increases (less acidic) | +M effect pushes electrons toward O-, destabilizing |
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