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12.16:

Aldehydes and Ketones with Alcohols: Acetal Formation Overview

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Organic Chemistry
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JoVE Core Organic Chemistry
Aldehydes and Ketones with Alcohols: Acetal Formation Overview

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12.16:

Aldehydes and Ketones with Alcohols: Acetal Formation Overview

Two molecules of alcohol add to an aldehyde or a ketone to give a dialkoxy compound called acetal. First, the aldehyde or the ketone reacts with one equivalent of alcohol to form a hemiacetal, which upon further reaction with another equivalent of alcohol forms the acetal. Acetal formation reaction is reversible and associated with the formation of the water as the by-product.

Figure1

Due to favorable steric and electronic factors, simple aldehydes like formaldehyde readily form an acetal. However, most of the ketones shift the equilibrium towards reactants. The equilibrium can be forced to shift to the right by employing Le Chatelier’s principle. Since alcohol acts as a solvent and as a reactant, adding excess alcohol shifts the equilibrium towards the right to generate more acetal. Alternatively, acetal formation can be favored by removing the by-product water formed during the reaction. Water is removed by transforming it into an azeotropic mixture using the Dean-Stark apparatus. In this apparatus, the reaction mixture is mixed with benzene and refluxed. The azeotrope boils at 69 ℃ and gets collected in the trap, where it gets separated into benzene and water-dominated layers. The upper benzene layer returns to the flask through the sidearm as the solvent amount rises in the trap, subsequently pushing more water out of the reaction mixture, favoring the acetal formation.

Entropic factors favor the reaction in which the loss in entropy from reactant to product is minimum. Hence, cyclic acetal formation is favored over acyclic acetal because the former involves a lower entropy loss compared to its acylic counterpart.