Carboxylic Acids: Crash Course Organic Chemistry #30 - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Carboxylic Acids: Crash Course Organic Chemistry #30 - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Carboxylic Acids: Crash Course Organic Chemistry #30 - By CrashCourse



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00:0-1 You can review content from crash course Organic Chemistry with
00:02 the crash course app available now for android and IOS
00:05 devices . Hi , I'm dave okay Chakravarty and welcome
00:08 to Crash course Organic Chemistry . What's the connection between
00:11 the smells of feet ? Under arms , vomit and
00:14 goats ? Carb oxalic acids . The smell of feet
00:18 is partly due to the presence of ice oval eric
00:20 acid , which is produced by the bacteria living on
00:23 your foot . Skin bacteria also turned odorless underarm secretions
00:27 such as amino acids into malodorous molecules which include carbon
00:31 cilic acids . The stench of vomit is caused by
00:34 beauty ric acid produced by bacteria in our gut beauty
00:37 . Uric acid is also found in rancid butter ,
00:40 that's where its name comes from . And it's a
00:42 key part of the aroma of parmesan cheese . It's
00:45 also added to some brands of american milk chocolate to
00:47 give it a tangy flavor . Yes , I basically
00:50 just said that puke flavored chocolate exists and now it's
00:53 going to haunt me forever . And three car back
00:55 cilic acids take their common names from the latin word
00:58 for goats . Capra , OIC acid , cap ,
01:00 krilic acid and ca prick acid found in small amounts
01:04 and goat's milk and produced in larger amounts as the
01:06 milk ages . They contribute to that goatee stench .
01:10 Given these awful smells , you might wonder why we'd
01:13 want to work with carb oxalic acids at all .
01:16 But we can actually make some pretty nice smelling compounds
01:19 using carb oxalic acids as a starting point and we
01:23 can convert them into other useful compounds for organic synthesis
01:29 . Yeah , let's kick off by reminding ourselves how
01:39 we can make a carb oxalic acid for example ,
01:42 we can oxidize alcohols or Aldo hides with chronic acid
01:45 or another suitable oxidizing agent . We can also make
01:48 them from Green Yard agents reacting the Green Yard Re
01:51 agent with carbon dioxide gives a carb oxalate salt ,
01:54 which can be protein aided with acid to give a
01:56 carb oxalic acid . We can get a more specific
01:59 name for any carb oxalic acid by looking at its
02:01 structure using the number of carbons in the longest chain
02:04 and adding the suffix OIC acid . A carb oxalic
02:07 acid with two carbons is death in OIC acid ,
02:10 A carb oxalic acid with three carbons is propane OIC
02:12 acid and so on . So in the previous reaction
02:16 we made to metal propane OIC acid when it comes
02:18 to naming compounds , carb oxalic acids have the highest
02:21 priority among carbon containing functional groups . So say we
02:25 have a molecule containing both a key tone and a
02:27 car park silic acid group . The car back silic
02:30 acid forms the base name . We assign the carb
02:32 oxalic acid carbon the number one and the ketone gets
02:35 a prefix . An example of this is four oxo
02:38 Penton OIC acid , also known as levy Olynyk acid
02:41 , a compound used as a starting point for the
02:43 synthesis of some pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals . This compound
02:47 , like many we've mentioned , has a systematic pack
02:50 name and a common name like how economic acid ,
02:53 the acid and vinegar has the common name acetic acid
02:57 . As you'd expect from all these names , car
02:59 back silic acid are acidic . If they have about
03:03 four carbons are fewer , they can dissolve in water
03:05 . The hydrogen in the ceo H . Part of
03:08 the structure will be partially ionized , forming a hydrogen
03:11 ion and leaving behind a car box . Late ion
03:14 . Specifically carb oxalic acids are weak acids because they
03:18 don't release hydrogen ions into solution as much as a
03:21 strong acid , like hydrochloric acid does The Ceo H
03:24 part of these structures allows inter molecular hydrogen bonds to
03:27 form between two acid molecules or an acid and water
03:31 . So carb oxalic acids have high boiling points and
03:35 all those with fewer than 10 carbons in a straight
03:37 chain are liquids at room temperature . We can react
03:40 shorter chain car park silic acid with sodium or potassium
03:43 hydroxide to form water soluble salts . To the hydroxide
03:46 ion grabs the proton from the carb oxalic acid group
03:49 , forming water and leaving a car box late ion
03:52 behind . In fact , even weak bases like ammonia
03:55 can pull off a hydrogen ion and form a car
03:57 box late ion . As we know from earlier episodes
04:00 , both hydroxide ions , an ammonia are good nuclear
04:02 files , which actually highlights an issue that can come
04:05 up in the lab . Most basic nuclear files tend
04:08 to deep protein a carb oxalic acids . So unlike
04:11 Aldo hides and key tones , we can't just use
04:13 a nuclear file to add groups to the carbondale carbon
04:16 here , we'll have to get a little more creative
04:17 with our chemistry . Before we tackle that problem though
04:20 , let's look at some other reactions . Carb oxalic
04:22 acids can undergo if we want to get back to
04:25 an alcohol from a car park silic acid , we
04:27 can use a reducing agent such as lithium aluminum hydride
04:30 . This is a powerful reducing agent . So after
04:33 the reaction we add a proton source very carefully to
04:37 react any unredacted lithium aluminum hydride and give our alcohol
04:41 a proton back . Another way to remove the car
04:43 back silic acid group has a very straightforward name .
04:46 D car box elation . This involves heating the carb
04:49 oxalic acid and replaces the car box silic acid group
04:52 with a hydrogen atom . So if we heat the
04:55 heck out of almost any car box silic acid ,
04:57 we can get it to D carb oxalate . And
05:00 this reaction happens really easily when you heat compounds that
05:03 have a carbon . He'll group one carbon away from
05:06 the car box silic acid group . However , sometimes
05:08 you don't want to get rid of the car box
05:10 silic acid group entirely . So there are also reactions
05:14 to convert it to other functional groups . In fact
05:17 , we can freshen up some of those bad smells
05:19 by converting carb oxalic acids into pleasant smelling esters by
05:23 fisher . A stare ification . This is an acid
05:25 catalyzed reaction of a car park silic acid with an
05:28 alcohol to form an ester esters are often key parts
05:31 of the smells of flowers and fruits and are commonly
05:34 used in perfumes . Fisher a stare ification can also
05:37 be classified as a type of condensation reaction because the
05:40 two reactions kick out a water molecule when they combine
05:43 to get more specific first , the carbondale oxygen grabs
05:47 a proton from the acid catalyst . Next the lone
05:50 pair on the alcohol oxygen acts as a nuclear file
05:53 attacking the carbonell carbon . Another alcohol molecule swoops in
05:57 deep , resonating the hydrogen from the oxygen iem ion
06:00 in that 12 punch of attack . Then discrimination .
06:02 We're getting familiar with the O . H . Group
06:05 on the car back . Silic acid finds a hydrogen
06:07 ion from the acid catalyst , which makes water a
06:10 good leaving group . With a little help from the
06:12 neighboring oxygen atom in the molecule , the water leaves
06:15 and finally another alcohol molecule from solution grabs the extra
06:20 hydrogen on the carbon oxygen , giving us an ester
06:23 as our final product . All of these steps are
06:25 reversible so the product isn't formed super efficiently , but
06:30 never fear . Last shot leah is here . We
06:33 have the power to adjust the equilibrium of chemical reactions
06:37 . Specifically , if we remove one of the products
06:39 along the way , we can push the reaction forward
06:42 in a lab , removing the water as it forms
06:45 using a special piece of equipment increases or yield of
06:48 the ester Speaking of tricky lab situations , How about
06:51 that problem ? We mentioned earlier the issue of nuclear
06:54 files discriminating carbon cilic acids instead of attacking the carbonell
06:58 carbon . To solve this problem , we can convert
07:01 the car back silic acid to a more reactive functional
07:04 group and acid chloride using either phosphorus Penta chloride or
07:08 thiamine chloride . And let's just go with phosphorus Penta
07:11 chloride . As our example , the reaction starts when
07:14 the lone pair of electrons on the carbondale oxygen forms
07:17 a bond with the phosphorus atom . With a little
07:19 help from the other oxygen in the molecule and kicks
07:22 a chloride ion off of phosphorus Penta chloride . The
07:24 chloride ion we kicked out in the previous step swoops
07:27 back and attacks the carbondale carbons . Then a very
07:30 stable double bond forms between the phosphorus and this oxygen
07:34 . This double bond is a big part of why
07:35 this reaction happens this way . Just like we saw
07:38 in the video reaction in episode 28 , specifically with
07:41 the formation of this bond , we lose chloride as
07:44 a leaving group , which pulls off the nearby hydrogen
07:47 to reform our carbon oxygen double bonds . This gives
07:50 us the acid chloride with hydrochloric acid in phosphorus oxy
07:53 chloride as the other products , acid chlorides along with
07:56 other car back silic acid derivatives are involved in many
07:59 useful reactions in organic chemistry . In fact , acid
08:03 chlorides were using the synthesis of the first mass produced
08:06 antibiotic penicillin , which is an important car box silic
08:09 acid in medicine . Throughout the rest of the crash
08:12 course , organic chemistry series will apply many of the
08:14 reactions we learned to explore the chemical synthesis of penicillin
08:17 , but penicillin was an accidental discovery , Not a
08:21 medicine dreamed up by humans , and the story of
08:24 this compound is much more complicated than just one scientist
08:28 making a lucky discovery in 1928 . Let's head to
08:31 the thought bubble to learn more . Returning to his
08:33 lab after a summer holiday , the microbiologist alexander Fleming
08:37 discovered that one of his Petri dishes of bacteria had
08:40 been unintentionally left out on a bench . Spores of
08:42 the fungus had blown into the lab and contaminated the
08:46 dish and the temperatures have been perfect to encourage both
08:48 the fungus and the bacteria to grow . But wherever
08:52 the fungus had grown , the bacteria were absent ,
08:55 Fleming realized that the fungus made a chemical compound that
08:58 killed the bacteria . The fungus was from the genus
09:01 Penicillium . So Fleming named this mysterious compound penicillin ,
09:06 but despite many attempts , he was unable to isolate
09:09 it at Oxford University , a biochemist named ERnst Chain
09:13 found Fleming's publication on penicillin And suggested to a supervisor
09:17 Howard Florey that they try to isolate it . penicillin
09:21 was eventually isolated and purified in 1941 . That same
09:25 year , penicillin was first used to treat an infection
09:27 in a police officer . It was later hailed as
09:30 a wonder drug during World War II for its ability
09:32 to combat infections and wounded troops . But there was
09:35 still a huge unsolved problem in the early 1940s .
09:39 The low yield of penicillin from the mold . In
09:41 1943 , a bacteriologist named Mary Hunt made a breakthrough
09:45 while working at the US . Department of Agriculture's Northern
09:48 Regional Research Laboratory in Peoria Illinois , nicknamed moldy mary
09:52 . She hunted down moldy fruits and vegetables to test
09:55 for the presence of penicillin in the lab . A
09:58 spoiled cantaloupe melon had a fungus , Penicillium chris agena
10:02 that produced 200 times more penicillin than the fungus that
10:06 Fleming stumbled upon making mass production possible . Think stoppable
10:10 since mary Hunts cantaloupe discovery , we've learned a lot
10:14 more like the penicillin czar , actually a family of
10:17 compounds with different potency ease in ways to administer the
10:20 medicine . The penicillin that Fleming discovered and chain and
10:23 Florey isolated and even won a nobel prize for in
10:26 1945 . Was penicillin f the stuff that was produced
10:30 from hunt spoiled cantaloupe melon was penicillin . G in
10:34 later episodes will be looking at dr john C .
10:37 She hand synthesis of penicillin v which is the first
10:40 penicillin to be synthesized from scratch instead of extracted from
10:44 a fungus . The synthesis takes many steps . So
10:47 , over the course of the series will fill out
10:49 what we're calling our mold medicine map and we'll discover
10:52 how penicillin kills bacteria , all using organic chemistry .
10:56 In this episode we reviewed the reactions that form carb
10:59 oxalic acids , recap nomenclature and explain the properties of
11:03 carb oxalic acids , reacted carb oxalic acids to form
11:07 salts and formed esters and acid chlorides from carb oxalic
11:10 acids . In the next episode , we'll start looking
11:13 at how we can use carb oxalic acid derivatives to
11:15 get to other functional groups and see where some of
11:18 these reactions fit into our synthesis of penicillin . Until
11:21 then , thanks for watching this episode of Crash Course
11:23 Organic Chemistry . If you want to help keep all
11:25 Crash course free for everybody forever , you can join
11:28 our community on patreon . Mhm .
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