REDOX REACTIONS IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

There are a variety of ways for calculating oxidation numbers for organic chemistry. In single C compounds, we use the same (rigorous) procedure used for inorganic chemistry, i.e., assign ox. #’s to all atoms other than C based on their EN values and calculate the ox. # of C from these with the aid of a couple rules ...

  1. The ox. # of a compound equals the charge on the compound
  1. Certain atoms have fixed ox. #’s when bonded to C, i.e., H= +1, O = -2, halogens (X) = -1

Calculate the ox. # of C in each of the following compounds ...

Ox. # -2 0 +2+4 +4+4

Oxidation of an organic compound causes an increase in oxidation number and is also defined as:

  • any reaction that increases the number of atoms which are more EN than C, i.e., O, N, X or
  • any reaction that decreases the number of atoms which are less EN than C, i.e., H, Li, Na, Mg

Reduction is the opposite , i.e., a decrease in oxidation number and a reaction that decreases the number of EN atoms or increases the number of EP (electropositive) atoms.

Identify the following reactions as oxidation or reduction...

A Simpler Method for Calculating Oxidation ‘Levels’ of Organic Compounds:

Consider the oxidation in the following compound ...

  1. Ignore the section of the compound which is unchanged. Calculate the change in oxidation level only for the C’s affected by the reaction and consider only the atoms directly bonded to C.
  1. Reverse the calculations ( signs) of the previous method ...
  • a bond to H (or anything EP) makes C = -1
  • a bond to O (or anything EN) makes C = +1
  • a bond to another C makes C = 0

Calculate the change in oxidation level in the reaction above. The formula below may be used.

(# C-O bonds) - (# C-H bonds) = ox. level

Oxidizing Reagents for Organic Chemistry

Oxidant (media) / Reduced Form / Oxidant / Reduced Form
(purple) MnO4- (OH- or neutral) / MnO2 (brown ppte.) / X2, e.g., Cl2 / X-, e.g., Cl-
(purple) MnO4- (H+) / Mn+2 (colorless, aq.) / H2O2 / 2 O-2
hot conc. HNO3 / NO2 (brown gas) / O2 / 2 O-2
(orange) H2CrO4 (aq. H2SO4) / Cr+3 (blue-green) / Pb(OAc)4 / Pb(OAc)2
PCC (in CH2Cl2) / Cr+3 (blue-green) / Hg(OAc)2 / HgOAc
HIO4 / HIO3 (colorless) / NaOCl (bleach) / Cl-

H2CrO4 is prepared by dissolving CrO3 (chromia or chromic anhydride) or K2Cr2O7 in aq. H2SO4.

Jones reagent: CrO3 + H2SO4 (aq.) + acetone  H2CrO4

Pyridinium Chlorochromate (PCC): CrO3 + C5H5N: + HCl  C5H6NCrO3Cl

Collins Reagent: CrO3 + 2 C5H5N:  (C5H5N)2CrO3

Cr+6 in aqueous acid soln. are strong oxidants. Cr+6 in anhydrous solvent are mild oxidants.

Reducing Agents for Organic Chemistry

Reducing Reagent (conditions) / Oxidized form
H2 (g) (Pt, Pd, Ni, etc. catalyst in EtOH) / H+
LiAlH4 (in ether) liberates :H- / H2
NaBH4 (in EtOH) liberates :H- / H2
BH3 (g) / H2
Li, Na, K, Zn, Hg, Mg, etc. / Li+, Na+, K+, Zn+2, etc.
SnCl2 + 2HCl = H2SnCl4 / H2SnCl6
Zn[Hg] + HCl / ZnCl2 + H2

Balancing Redox Equations:

In order to calculate the theoretical and actual yield from a reaction, a balanced chemical equation is necessary. The following rules describe the Ion-Electron Half-Reaction Method for balancing redox equations ...

  1. Break the equation into 2 half-reactions, i.e., oxidation and reduction
  1. Balance all atoms in each half-reaction other than H and O
  1. Balance O and H as follows ...
  • add H2O to balance O’s first, then balance H’s by adding H+
  • add sufficient electrons to balance the charges

Note: e-‘s are always added to the right side of the oxidation ½-reaction because ox. = loss of e-‘s

Note: e-‘s are always added to the left side of the reduction ½-reaction because red. = gain of e-‘s

  • if the reaction is carried out in alkaline media, add enough OH- to neutralize all H+ (combine them to make HOH) and be sure to add the same quantity of OH- to both sides to keep mass and charges balanced
  1. Multiply each ½-reaction by a least common multiple so the number of e-‘s transferred in each ½-reaction is equal.
  2. Add the ½-reactions and cancel common terms from each side
  3. Check for charge and mass balance

Balance the following redox equations for practice ...

  1. Cyclopentanol is cleaved by strong oxidants like hot, conc. HNO3 producing 1,3-dipentanoic acid.
  2. Cyclohexene is cleaved by strong oxidants like hot, acidic KMnO4
  3. Cyclohexene is oxidized to a diol by cold, neutral or alkaline KMnO4

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