Asked by struggling with o-chem
So in lab, I was to oxidize 9-fluorenol to 9 fluorenone. The chemicals I used were: 100 mg. of 9-fluorenol in 6mL of acetone. 0.25 mL of glacial acetic acid and 1.2 mL of a 5.25% sodium hypochlorite solution.
My question is if I attempt to oxidize 9-fluorenol by adding only bleach and acetone, can I expect the experiment to yield 9-fluorenone? Explain.
Were all necessary reagents added?
My guess is that I can still yield 9-fluorenone because the bleach contains the oxidizing agent Cl? I don't understand what the glacial acetic acid does. Nor do I understand the difference between glacial acetic acid and acetic acid ( i already read wikipedia but still confused). Please help and thank you. I really appreciate any help and admire your knowledge.
My question is if I attempt to oxidize 9-fluorenol by adding only bleach and acetone, can I expect the experiment to yield 9-fluorenone? Explain.
Were all necessary reagents added?
My guess is that I can still yield 9-fluorenone because the bleach contains the oxidizing agent Cl? I don't understand what the glacial acetic acid does. Nor do I understand the difference between glacial acetic acid and acetic acid ( i already read wikipedia but still confused). Please help and thank you. I really appreciate any help and admire your knowledge.
Answers
Answered by
rBob222
The hypochlorite is the oxidizing agent and that is OCl^- and not Cl^- nor Cl2. Furthermore, HOCl oxidizing power is controlled somewhat by the acidity of the mixture. The half reaction for the OCl^- acting as an oxidizing agent is
OCl^- + 2e + 2H^+ ==> Cl^- + H2O
so the solution should be acid. That is the part that glacial acetic acid plays. Glacial acetic acid is concentrated acetic acid (about 99% acetic acid) as opposed to a laboratory reagent acetic acid which might be 6 molar or even weaker.
OCl^- + 2e + 2H^+ ==> Cl^- + H2O
so the solution should be acid. That is the part that glacial acetic acid plays. Glacial acetic acid is concentrated acetic acid (about 99% acetic acid) as opposed to a laboratory reagent acetic acid which might be 6 molar or even weaker.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.