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17.11: Reactions of Phenols

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    Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions

    The hydroxyl group is a strongly activating, ortho- and para-directing substituent in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions (Section 16.4). As a result, phenols are highly reactive substrates for electrophilic halogenation, nitration, sulfonation, and Friedel–Crafts reactions.

    Phenol reacts with an electrophile to form ortho-substituted phenol and para-substituted phenol.

    Oxidation of Phenols: Quinones

    Phenols don’t undergo oxidation in the same way as alcohols because they don’t have a hydrogen atom on the hydroxyl-bearing carbon. Instead, oxidation of a phenol yields a 2,5-cyclohexadiene-1,4-dione, or quinone. Many different oxidizing agents will accomplish the transformation, but potassium nitrosodisulfonate [(KSO3)2NO], called Fremy’s salt, is often used.

    Phenol reacts with sodium dichromate to form benzoquinone with 79 percent yield. The electrostatic potential map of benzoquinone shows carbon, hydrogen and oxygen as black, gray and red spheres, respectively.

    Quinones are a valuable class of compounds because of their oxidation–reduction, or redox, properties. They can be easily reduced to hydroquinones (p-dihydroxybenzenes) by reagents such as NaBH4 and SnCl2, and hydroquinones can be easily reoxidized back to quinones.

    A reversible reaction in which benzoquinone reacts with tin(2) chloride, water, and sodium dichromate to form hydroquinone.

    The redox properties of quinones are crucial to the functioning of living cells, where compounds called ubiquinones act as biochemical oxidizing agents to mediate the electron-transfer processes involved in energy production. Ubiquinones, also called coenzymes Q, are components of the cells in all aerobic organisms, from the simplest bacterium to humans. They are so named because of their ubiquitous occurrence throughout nature.

    The structure of ubiquinones. One substituent has a repeating unit that occurs 1 to 10 times (n equals 1 to 10).

    Ubiquinones function within the mitochondria of cells to mediate the respiration process in which electrons are transported from the biological reducing agent NADH to molecular oxygen. Through a complex series of steps, the ultimate result is a cycle whereby NADH is oxidized to NAD+, O2 is reduced to water, and energy is produced. Ubiquinone acts only as an intermediary and is itself unchanged.

    Two steps in which ubiquinone functions as an intermediate to convert nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrogen to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide plus ion by oxidation.

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