Organic Chemistry

(Dana P.) #1
862 CHAPTER 20 More About Oxidation–Reduction Reactions

molozonide. (The name “molozonide”indicates that one mole of ozone has added to
the alkene.) The molozonide is unstable because it has two bonds; it immedi-
ately rearranges to a more stable ozonide.

Ozonides are explosive, so they are seldom isolated. In solution, they are easily
cleaved to carbonyl compounds. If the ozonide is cleaved in the presence of a reducing
agent such as zinc or dimethyl sulfide, the products will be ketones and/or aldehydes.
(The product will be a ketone if the carbon of the alkene is bonded to two carbon-
containing substituents; the product will be an aldehyde if at least one of the sub-
stituents bonded to the carbon is a hydrogen.) The reducing agent prevents
aldehydes from being oxidized to carboxylic acids. Cleaving the ozonide in the pres-
ence of zinc or dimethyl sulfide is referred to as “working up the ozonide under reduc-
ing conditions.”

If the ozonide is cleaved in the presence of an oxidizing agent such as hydrogen perox-
ide the products will be ketones and/or carboxylic acids. Carboxylic acids are
formed instead of aldehydes because any aldehyde that is initially formed will be im-
mediately oxidized to a carboxylic acid by hydrogen peroxide. Cleavage in the pres-
ence of is referred to as “working up the ozonide under oxidizing conditions.”
The following reactions are examples of the oxidative cleavage of alkenes by
ozonolysis:

O

O
H

CH 3 CH 2 CH CHCH 2 CH 3


  1. O3, – 78 °C

  2. Zn, H 2 O


CH 3 CH 2 H


  1. O3, – 78 °C

  2. (CH 3 ) 2 S


CH 3

2 C

O

CH 3 CH 2 CH CCH 2 CH 3 +

CH 3

CH 3 CH 2

HO

C O


  1. O3, – 78 °C

  2. H 2 O 2


CH 2 CH 3

CH 3

O C

H 2 O 2

(H 2 O 2 ),

C
R

R

R

R
C

C
R

R

OH

R

H

R
C

H

R
C

ozonide

a ketone an aldehyde

OO

Zn, H 2 O
or
(CH 3 ) 2 S

H 2 O 2

+

a ketone a carboxylic acid

OOC+

O

O O

oxidizing
conditions

reducing
conditions

sp^2

sp^2

O¬O

To determine the product of ozonolysis,
replace with
If work-up is done under oxidizing
conditions, convert any aldehyde
products to carboxylic acids.

C“C C“OO“C.

R

C

R

O H

C

O

R
O

O

−O O


+

+

molozonide ozonide

mechanism for ozonide formation

C
R

C
H R

R R
C

R RR
C
H

C

R
RHC

O

O O
O

O O

3-D Molecules:
Ozone;
Molozonide;
Ozonide

BRUI20_841_882r3 01-04-2003 1:11 PM Page 862

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