Chemistry, Third edition

(Wang) #1

332 18 · COMMON CLASSES OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS


Ethanol


Although there are many alcohols, when the non-chemist refers to ‘alcohol’ they gen-
erally mean ethanol. Ethanol can be made by the decomposition of carbohydrates, a
process known as fermentation.
Fruit juices, such as grape juice, contain the sugar glucose (molecular formula
C 6 H 12 O 6 ). Glucose can be fermented into alcohol by the addition of yeast. Yeast is a
fungus that contains the enzyme zymase, which catalyses the decomposition of
glucose into ethanol. Enzymesare biological catalysts. The fermentation reaction is
carried out at about 20 °C – high temperatures kill the yeast and at lower tempera-
tures the process is too slow. The equation for the reaction may be written as

C 6 H 12 O 6 (aq)2C 2 H 5 OH(aq)2CO 2 (g)
glucose ethanol

Fermentation ceases when the ethanol content of the mixture reaches about 14%
(v/v); higher concentrations of ethanol kill the yeast. If a higher concentration of
alcohol is required, the mixture is fractionally distilled. ‘Spirits’ such as whisky or
brandy may contain about 40% ethanol. Although fermentation is used to produce
alcoholic beverages, it is rarely used to synthesize the chemical ethanol on a large
scale. Alcohols, such as ethanol, can be produced commercially by the addition of
water across an alkene double bond (a hydration reaction). The reaction is catalysed
by phosphoric acid:

H 3 PO 4
CH 2 ==CH 2 H 2 O —CH 3 CH 2 OH
ethene steam 300 °C, ethanol
70 atm

Because alcohols form hydrogen bonds with other alcohol molecules, the boil-
ing points of the alcohols tend to be higher than other organic compounds of simi-
lar molecular mass. Their ability to hydrogen bond with water allows the lower
molecular mass alcohols to dissolve in, or be miscible with, water. Ethane-1,2-diol,
or ethylene glycol, is used as a component in antifreeze because it has a high solubil-
ity in water, it contains two hydroxy groups which can hydrogen bond with the
water, and it has a high boiling point and low freezing point.


  1. Alcohols are good solvents


The presence of an –OH group means that they have some of the solvent properties
of water and can dissolve ionic compounds. The R–group allows them to behave as
solvents to organic, covalent substances.

Properties of alcohols


Chloroethane, butane and propan-1-ol have boiling points of 286 K, 272 K and 371 K,
respectively.
(i) Calculate the molecular mass of each compound.
(ii)Assuming all their melting points are lower than room temperature, what is the state of
each substance under conditions of 20 °C and 1 atm pressure?
(iii)Explain why the boiling point of propan-1-ol is much higher than those of the other two
compounds.

Exercise 18C

Free download pdf