Carbonyl group
For
The term carbonyl can also refer to
The remainder of this article concerns itself with the organic chemistry definition of carbonyl, such that carbon and oxygen share a double bond.
Carbonyl compounds
In organic chemistry, a carbonyl group characterizes the following types of compounds:
Compound | Aldehyde | Ketone | Carboxylic acid | Carboxylate ester | Amide |
Structure | |||||
General formula | RCHO | RCOR' | RCOOH | RCOOR' | RCONR'R'' |
Compound | Enone |
Acyl halide | Acid anhydride | Imide |
Structure | ||||
General formula | RC(O)C(R')CR''R''' | RCOX | (RCO)2O | RC(O)N(R')C(O)R'' |
Other organic carbonyls are urea and the carbamates, the derivatives of acyl chlorides chloroformates and phosgene, carbonate esters, thioesters, lactones, lactams, hydroxamates, and isocyanates. Examples of inorganic carbonyl compounds are carbon dioxide and carbonyl sulfide.[citation needed]
A special group of carbonyl compounds are dicarbonyl compounds, which can exhibit special properties.
Structure and reactivity
For organic compounds, the length of the C-O bond does not vary widely from 120
The carbonyl carbon is typically electrophilic. A qualitative order of electrophilicity is RCHO (aldehydes) > R2CO (ketones) > RCO2R' (esters) > RCONH2 (amides). A variety of nucleophiles attack, breaking the carbon-oxygen double bond.
Interactions between carbonyl groups and other substituents were found in a study of collagen.[3] Substituents can affect carbonyl groups by addition or subtraction of electron density by means of a sigma bond.[4] ΔHσ values are much greater when the substituents on the carbonyl group are more electronegative than carbon.[4]
The polarity of C=O bond also enhances the acidity of any adjacent C-H bonds. Due to the positive charge on carbon and the negative charge on oxygen, carbonyl groups are subject to additions and/or nucleophilic attacks. A variety of nucleophiles attack, breaking the carbon-oxygen double bond, and leading to addition-elimination reactions. Nucleophiliic reactivity is often proportional to the basicity of the nucleophile and as nucleophilicity increases, the stability within a carbonyl compound decreases.[5] The pKa values of acetaldehyde and acetone are 16.7 and 19 respectively,[6]
Spectroscopy
- Infrared spectroscopy: the C=O double bond absorbs infrared light at wavenumbers between approximately 1600–1900 cm−1(5263 nm to 6250 nm). The exact location of the absorption is well understood with respect to the geometry of the molecule. This absorption is known as the "carbonyl stretch" when displayed on an infrared absorption spectrum.[7] In addition, the ultraviolet-visible spectra of propanone in water gives an absorption of carbonyl at 257 nm.[8]
- 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.[9]
See also
- Carbon–oxygen bond
- Organic chemistry
- Functional group
- Bridging carbonyl
- Electrophilic addition
References
- ISBN 9780470771228.
- ISBN 9780470771051.
- PMID 28735540.
- ^ ISSN 0001-4842.
- PMID 5915153.
- ISBN 0-02-390171-3
- ISBN 0-471-24823-1.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-08-24. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "NMR Spectroscopy. 13C NMR". organicchemistrydata.org. 20 October 2021. Archived from the original on 6 January 2024. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
Further reading
- L.G. Wade, Jr. Organic Chemistry, 5th ed. 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. tara VirtualText of Organic Chemistry (2004).
- Purdue Chemistry Department [1] (retrieved Sep 2006). Includes water solubility data.
- William Reusch. (2004) Aldehydes and Ketones Retrieved 23 May 2005.
- ILPI. (2005) The MSDS Hyperglossary- Anhydride.