Hydrolysis of Esters
Summary
- Carboxylic esters hydrolyze to the parent carboxylic acid and an alcohol.
- Reagents : aqueous acid (e.g. H2SO4) / heat, or aqueous NaOH / heat (known as "saponification").
- These mechanisms are among some of the most studied in organic chemistry.
- Both are based on the formation of a tetrahedral intermediate which then dissociates.
- In both cases it is the C-O bond between the acyl group and the oxygen that is cleaved.
- Fischer esterification
- Hydrolysis of Amides
- The mechanism shown below leads to acyl-oxygen cleavage (see step 2).
- The mechanism is supported by experiments using 18O labeled compounds and esters of chiral alcohols.
- This reaction is known as "saponification" because it is the basis of making soap from glycerol triesters in fats.
- The mechanism is an example of the reactive system type.
Step 1: The hydroxide nucleophiles attacks at the electrophilic C of the ester C=O, breaking the p bond and creating the tetrahedral intermediate. | |
Step 2: The intermediate collapses, reforming the C=O results in the loss of the leaving group the alkoxide, leading to the carboxylic acid. | |
Step 3: An acid / base reaction. A very rapid equilibrium where the alkoxide functions as a base deprotonating the carboxylic acid (an acidic work up would allow the carboxylic acid to be obtained from the reaction). | |
- Note that the acid catalyzed mechanism is the reverse of the Fischer esterification.
- The mechanism shown below also leads to acyl-oxygen cleavage (see step 5).
- The mechanism is an example of the less reactive system type.
Step 1: An acid/base reaction. Since we only have a weak nucleophile and a poor electrophile we need to activate the ester. Protonation of the ester carbonyl makes it more electrophilic. | |
Step 2: The water O functions as the nucleophile attacking the electrophilic C in the C=O, with the electrons moving towards the oxonium ion, creating the tetrahedral intermediate. | |
Step 3: An acid/base reaction. Deprotonate the oxygen that came from the water molecule. | |
Step 4: An acid/base reaction. Need to make the -OCH3 leave, but need to convert it into a good leaving group first by protonation. | |
Step 5: Use the electrons of an adjacent oxygen to help "push out" the leaving group, a neutral methanol molecule. | |
Step 6: An acid/base reaction. Deprotonation of the oxonium ion reveals the carbonyl in the carboxylic acid product and regenerates the acid catalyst. | |