Chapter: Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers – Detailed Notes for NEET/JEE Mains
1. Introduction and Classification
A. Alcohols
Definition: Organic compounds containing one or more hydroxyl (−OH) groups attached to an alkyl group (aliphatic carbon chain).
General Formula: R−OH
Classification of Alcohols:
Based on the number of -OH groups:
Monohydric alcohols: Contain one -OH group (e.g., ethanol, CH3CH2OH).
Dihydric alcohols (Glycols): Contain two -OH groups (e.g., ethylene glycol, HO-CH2CH2-OH).
Trihydric alcohols (Glycerols): Contain three -OH groups (e.g., glycerol, HO-CH2CH(OH)CH2-OH).
Polyhydric alcohols: Contain more than three -OH groups.
Based on the hybridization of carbon atom to which -OH group is attached:
Compounds containing sp3 C-OH bond:
Alkyl Alcohols: -OH group attached to an alkyl group.
Primary (1∘): -OH attached to a primary carbon atom (e.g., CH3CH2OH).
Secondary (2∘): -OH attached to a secondary carbon atom (e.g., CH3CH(OH)CH3).
Tertiary (3∘): -OH attached to a tertiary carbon atom (e.g., (CH3)3COH).
Allylic Alcohols: -OH group attached to an sp3 hybridized carbon atom next to a carbon-carbon double bond (e.g., CH2=CH−CH2OH).
Benzylic Alcohols: -OH group attached to an sp3 hybridized carbon atom next to an aromatic ring (e.g., C6H5CH2OH).
Compounds containing sp2 C-OH bond:
Vinylic Alcohols (Enols): -OH group attached directly to an sp2 hybridized carbon atom of a carbon-carbon double bond (e.g., CH2=CH−OH). These are generally unstable and tautomerize to aldehydes or ketones.
B. Phenols
Definition: Organic compounds in which the hydroxyl (−OH) group is directly attached to an sp2 hybridized carbon atom of an aromatic ring.
General Formula: Ar−OH
Classification:
Monohydric phenols: One -OH group (e.g., phenol).
Dihydric phenols: Two -OH groups (e.g., catechol, resorcinol, hydroquinone).
Trihydric phenols: Three -OH groups (e.g., pyrogallol, phloroglucinol).
C. Ethers
Definition: Organic compounds in which an oxygen atom is bonded to two alkyl or aryl groups.
General Formula: R−O−R′ or Ar−O−Ar′ or R−O−Ar
Classification:
Symmetrical (Simple) Ethers: Both alkyl/aryl groups attached to oxygen are identical (e.g., diethyl ether, CH3CH2−O−CH2CH3).
Unsymmetrical (Mixed) Ethers: The two alkyl/aryl groups attached to oxygen are different (e.g., ethyl methyl ether, CH3−O−CH2CH3).
2. Nomenclature
A. Alcohols
Common names: Alkyl group name followed by “alcohol” (e.g., CH3OH is methyl alcohol).
IUPAC names: “Alkanol.” The longest carbon chain containing the -OH group is selected, and the -e of alkane is replaced by -ol. Position of -OH group is indicated by number. (e.g., CH3OH is methanol, CH3CH2OH is ethanol, CH3CH(OH)CH3 is propan-2-ol).
B. Phenols
Common names: Derived from parent phenol (e.g., phenol, cresol).
IUPAC names: Substituted phenols. The -OH group is assigned position 1. (e.g., 2-methylphenol (o-cresol), 3-chlorophenol).
C. Ethers
Common names: Alkyl/aryl groups are named alphabetically followed by “ether” (e.g., CH3OCH3 is dimethyl ether, CH3OCH2CH3 is ethyl methyl ether).
IUPAC names: Named as “alkoxyalkanes” or “alkoxyarenes”. The larger alkyl group forms the parent alkane/arene, and the smaller alkyl-oxygen part is named as an “alkoxy” substituent (e.g., CH3OCH3 is methoxymethane, CH3OCH2CH3 is methoxyethane).
3. Structure
The oxygen atom in alcohols, phenols, and ethers is sp3 hybridized.
The C-O-H bond angle in alcohols and phenols (e.g., 108.9∘ in methanol) and C-O-C bond angle in ethers (e.g., 111.7∘ in diethyl ether) are slightly less than the tetrahedral angle (109.5∘) due to the repulsion between lone pairs of electrons on oxygen.
The C-O bond length in phenols is slightly shorter than in alcohols due to partial double bond character between carbon and oxygen (sp2 hybridized carbon of benzene ring and oxygen lone pair resonance) and also due to the sp2 hybridized carbon of phenol being smaller.
From Cumene (Isopropylbenzene): (Industrial method)
Cumene (i)O2,heat(ii)H+/H2OPhenol+Acetone
C. Preparation of Ethers
From Alcohols by Dehydration:
By heating excess alcohol with concentrated H2SO4 at 413 K (140∘C).
2R-OHConc. H2SO4,413KR-O-R+H2O
This is an SN2 reaction (nucleophilic attack by one alcohol molecule on a protonated alcohol molecule).
Limitations: Only effective for symmetrical ethers from 1∘ alcohols. For 2∘ or 3∘ alcohols, or at higher temperatures (443 K/170∘C), elimination (alkene formation) predominates.
For unsymmetrical ethers, it gives a mixture of products.
Williamson Synthesis: (Best method for preparing symmetrical and unsymmetrical ethers)
Reaction of an alkyl halide with sodium alkoxide.
R-X+NaOR′→R-O-R′+NaX
Mechanism: SN2 reaction.
Important Note: For unsymmetrical ethers, a primary alkyl halide must be used, and a tertiary alkoxide can be used. If a tertiary alkyl halide is used with a primary alkoxide, elimination predominates (E2 reaction).
Boiling Points: Higher than corresponding alkanes, haloalkanes, and ethers of comparable molecular mass. This is due to the presence of intermolecular hydrogen bonding between hydroxyl groups. Boiling point increases with increasing number of -OH groups.
Solubility: Lower alcohols (up to 3 carbon atoms) are miscible with water due to their ability to form hydrogen bonds with water molecules. Solubility decreases with increasing alkyl chain length (hydrophobic part increases).
B. Phenols
Boiling Points: Higher than corresponding hydrocarbons and haloarenes due to intermolecular hydrogen bonding.
Solubility: Sparingly soluble in water, but more soluble than alcohols of comparable molecular mass due to their ability to form stronger hydrogen bonds with water. Also soluble in organic solvents.
Acidity: Phenols are more acidic than alcohols but less acidic than carboxylic acids. This is due to the resonance stabilization of the phenoxide ion (negative charge delocalized over the benzene ring). Electron-withdrawing groups (e.g., −NO2) increase acidity, while electron-donating groups (e.g., −CH3) decrease acidity.
C. Ethers
Boiling Points: Much lower than alcohols of comparable molecular mass (due to the absence of hydrogen bonding) but comparable to alkanes or haloalkanes of similar molecular mass.
Solubility: Slightly soluble in water (can form H-bonds with water through oxygen’s lone pairs, but no −OH group to donate H-bond). Solubility decreases with increasing size of alkyl groups. Readily soluble in organic solvents.
Polarity: Ethers have a net dipole moment due to the bent structure and polar C-O bonds.
6. Chemical Reactions
A. Reactions of Alcohols
Reactions involving cleavage of O-H bond (Acidic nature):
Reaction with active metals: Alcohols are weakly acidic.
2R-OH+2Na→2R-ONa (Sodium alkoxide)+H2↑
Esterification: Reaction with carboxylic acids or acid derivatives to form esters.
Acidity Order: 1∘>2∘>3∘ (due to +I effect of alkyl groups increasing electron density on oxygen, making O-H bond less polar). Methanol is slightly more acidic than ethanol.
Reactions involving cleavage of C-O bond:
Reaction with Hydrogen halides (HX): (already covered in preparation of haloalkanes)
R-OH+HX→R-X+H2O (Reactivity: HI > HBr > HCl; Alcohol reactivity: 3∘>2∘>1∘)
Reaction with Phosphorus halides (PX3,PX5): (already covered)
Reactivity: 3∘>2∘>1∘ (due to stability of carbocation/alkene).
Dehydration to Ethers: (already covered in preparation of ethers)
2R-OHConc. H2SO4,413KR-O-R+H2O
Oxidation Reactions:
Primary alcohols: Oxidize to aldehydes, then to carboxylic acids.
RCH2OHPCC (Pyridinium Chlorochromate)RCHO (aldehyde) (mild oxidant, stops at aldehyde)
RCH2OHKMnO4 or K2Cr2O7/H+RCOOH (carboxylic acid) (strong oxidant)
Secondary alcohols: Oxidize to ketones.
RCH(OH)R′PCC or K2Cr2O7/H+RCOR′ (ketone)
Tertiary alcohols: Do not undergo oxidation under normal conditions (no H on the carbon bearing -OH). Require drastic conditions (strong oxidizing agents, high temperature) to undergo C-C bond cleavage, yielding a mixture of carboxylic acids with fewer carbon atoms.
Acidic Nature: Phenols are acidic due to the resonance stabilization of the phenoxide ion formed after losing a proton.
Phenols are stronger acids than alcohols but weaker than carboxylic acids.
They react with active metals and strong bases (NaOH), but generally not with weaker bases like NaHCO3.
Effect of substituents on acidity:
Electron-withdrawing groups (EWG, like −NO2, −CN, −COOH, halogens) at ortho and para positions increase acidity by delocalizing the negative charge of the phenoxide ion. p-Nitrophenol is more acidic than o-nitrophenol due to lesser steric inhibition of resonance.
Electron-donating groups (EDG, like −CH3, −OCH3) decrease acidity by intensifying the negative charge on the phenoxide ion.
Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions: -OH group is a strong activating and ortho-para directing group due to resonance (lone pair on oxygen donates electron density to the ring).
Nitration:
With dilute HNO3: Phenol Dil. HNO3,298Ko-nitrophenol (steam volatile)+p-nitrophenol (higher boiling)
With concentrated HNO3: Phenol Conc. HNO3,Conc. H2SO42,4,6-trinitrophenol (Picric acid)
Halogenation (Bromination):
With Br2/CS2 (non-polar solvent, low temperature): Forms mono-substituted product (o- and p-bromophenol).
With Br2/H2O (polar solvent, phenol ionizes to phenoxide ion, which is highly activated): Forms 2,4,6-tribromophenol (white precipitate).