Leah here from leah4sci.com and in this video
we'll begin our discussion of Oxidation and Reduction reactions of Organic Compounds as
you'll see in Organic Chemistry. Think back to when you first learned about
Redox in General Chemistry. You’ve probably seen one of these mnemonics. OIL RIG which
stands for Oxidation is loss, Reduction is gain. I don't like this because it doesn't
tell me what I'm gaining and losing and if a mnemonic doesn't tell me what it is, I get
confused. The second mnemonic I learned from a student and I find that much more applicable.
LEO the lion says GER and this mnemonic tells me that the loss of electrons is an Oxidation
reaction and the gain of electrons is a reduction reaction. And this worked very well in General
Chemistry when you look at batteries and circuits and electrons moving on a wire but in Organic
Chemistry you're looking at bonds being formed, atoms moving from one molecule to the other.
How can we apply this? Let's take a step back and re-evaluate what
we know about Oxidation and Reduction. Oxidation is the loss of electrons, and if you think
of an electron dragging a proton with it we have hydrogen atom. So Oxidation is really
the loss of a hydrogen atom. Reduction is the gain of electrons and if we take the electron
and bring a proton with it, we simply have the gain of a hydrogen atom. But redox in
Organic Chemistry often involves the Oxygen atom. So think of Oxygen and Hydrogen as antagonists
to each other. If we take an atom that has hydrogen and put an Oxygen on it, we separated
the carbon hydrogen bond so in losing that hydrogen atom, we gain an Oxygen atom. So
Oxidation has Oxygen in it. It can be the loss of a hydrogen atom or the gain of an
Oxygen atom. I'll often write Oxygen as Ox instead of just O so we don't confuse it with
a letter or a zero. Reduction, which is the gain of hydrogen atom
can also be the loss of an Oxygen atom. But there's one more method you're used to recognizing
for Oxidation or Reduction and that is the oxidation number or the change in Oxidation
number. For example, if I have the ion Fe2+ reacting to form Fe3+, you’ve probably learned
that when the Oxidation number goes up that is Oxidation. How do you know this? I think
of it as the oxidation number having gone up. Up with an O. When the charge goes up,
it's in Oxidation. On the other hand, the reverse reaction here has the oxidation number
going down or being reduced and the word reduced has reduction in it. So that's a third way
to look at it. Oxidation is when we go up in charge and reduction is when we reduce
the charge. We'll use a combination of these three approaches
when looking at the Oxidation or Reduction reactions of Organic compounds. I'll go through
a couple of them in this video to give you an overview but I'll cover them in much more
detail in the remainder of this series including step by step explanations and detailed mechanisms.
You can find this entire series along with the redox practice quiz and cheat sheet by
visiting my website leah4sci.com/Redox. Let's start with a simple reaction. An alkene
can be both oxidized and reduced. If we take this molecule and do hydration. For example,
reacting it with H2SO4 in the presence of H2O. You should recognize this as the acid
catalyzed hydration of alkenes which will break the pi bond and give me an alcohol on
the more substituted carbon. In this case it doesn't matter because they're both equivalent
so I get an OH. We recognize this as an oxidation reaction because we gain a bond to oxygen.
The carbon here got oxidized, but now let's prove it looking at the oxidation number.
In general chemistry you learn to take all the atoms, add up their oxidation numbers
and that should equal to the charge of the molecule. Which is fine when you're dealing
with small ions but when you have large organic molecules, it gets overwhelming. Instead we wanna zero in on just the atom
in question and see what happens to that atom. For carbon in particular, if it's bound to
another carbon, they're equal, their charge is zero. If it's bound to a hydrogen atom
as we have here, we'll think of the hydrogen as having an oxidation number of plus one.
If the molecule is net neutral and carbon is bound to an oxidation of plus one, it has
to be minus one. That’s what gives us the neutrality. So we're starting with a negative
one carbon and for the product, don't forget we still have that hydrogen atom. Hydrogen
is still plus one. Oxygen is more electronegative, it's minus one, plus one and minus one equals
zero so the carbon holding them is also zero to give us a net neutral. What happened to
the oxidation state of carbon? It went from negative one up to zero. Zero is greater than
negative one, and since it went up in oxidation state or up in charge, we know it's an oxidation.
The alcohol can be oxidized further, we can get a ketone, we can get an aldehyde if it's
terminal, we can cleave the molecule, oxidative cleavage to give aldehydes or carboxylic acids,
but let's hold off on that for now. Another reaction that I can do here is to
react the alkene in the presence of something like H2 with a palladium carbide catalyst.
You should recognize this as the alkene reduction reaction. In addition to the two hydrogens
initially on the carbon, we now have two more hydrogen atoms from this reaction so that
carbon is fully saturated. We recognize this as reduction because reduction is the gain
of electrons with protons, meaning the gain of hydrogen atom. But let's take a look at
the oxidation numbers as well. Each hydrogen atom has an oxidation of plus one. What will
balance plus 2 minus 2? So carbon here has an oxidation number of minus 2 and minus 2,
both carbon atoms reacted. What is the process of going from negative one to negative two?
We have to reduce the charge by one. We dropped it, negative one down to negative two, and
because it's reduced by one, this is a reduction reaction. As you're studying this in class, don't go
through all these oxidation numbers. I'm simply showing it to you to prove it to you but I
want you to use the trick of gain hydrogen atoms = reduction, gain hydrogen atoms = oxidation.
Let's take a look at an alkyne which is the same general structure but there is a triple
bond between the two carbon atoms instead of just a double bond. We can still carry
out a series of hydration reactions, for example if we react it with HgSO4 and H2SO4, you should
recognize this as the oxymercuration of an alkyne which will first give you an enol that'll
tautomerize to give you a ketone. What type of reaction is this? Well we had zero bonds
to oxygen in the beginning. We gained two bonds to oxygen, it has to be an oxidation
reaction which it shows on oxygen in brackets. But let's prove it by looking at the oxidation
state of the carbon that changed. This carbon is only bound to carbon, that means it's neutral
and it's oxidation number, is zero. Since carbon that's double bound to Oxygen is double
bound to a more electronegative atom, we get a negative, not for Oxygen but per oxygen
bonds. So this bond here is negative one, this bond is negative one, that means the
carbon to balance it must be positive two. From neutral zero all the way up with an O.
If it goes up by two it's an oxidation reaction. How do we know? we gained bonds to oxygen. The alkyne can be oxidized in many different
ways. We can get a diol, we can get a diketone, we can get an aldehyde if it's terminal. Cleave
it to get carboxylic acids and more, but the concept is the same. Gaining bonds to oxygen
is Oxidation. If we reduce the alkyne, we can get a mix of an alkane, a cis-alkene,
or even a trans alkene. The central carbons, the carbons that start out triple bond, have
no hydrogens. I want you to notice that each of these products has more hydrogen atoms
than what we had initially. We won't go through the individual oxidation numbers because by
now I hope you see the pattern and understand gaining those hydrogen atoms is a reduction
reaction. And we'll go into it in more detail for the redox of alkenes and alkynes video. Another common redox series you'll see starts
or ends with an alcohol. If we start with a primary alcohol, we can partially oxidize
it to get an aldehyde. How do we know it's oxidation? Carbon has one bond to oxygen,
here it has two bonds to oxygen, but look at what else happened. We have two hydrogen
atoms here, we only have one hydrogen atom here, so in addition to gaining a bond to
oxygen, we also lost a bond to hydrogen. Both of these are definitions for oxidation. We
can oxidize this even further to a carboxylic acid. So primary alcohol can form an aldehyde
or a carboxylic acid and notice the carboxyl group has an additional bond to oxygen on
the carbon atom. If we take the same sequence and reverse it, we lose one bond to oxygen
for a single reduction. We lose another bond to oxygen or another reduction all the way
back to a primary alcohol. If we start with a secondary alcohol, we can only do one simple
oxidation before we start breaking the carbon chain. How do you know we can only do one oxidation?
We only have one hydrogen atom on a carbon to remove. In order to oxidize we need to
remove hydrogen and add Oxygen. Getting that second bond to oxygen gives carbon four bonds
to either carbon on oxygen and that's as far as they can go unless we go to extreme conditions
and turn it into something like an ester. This is the oxidation and if we reverse it
by removing the bond to oxygen adding a hydrogen, that would be a reduction. A secondary alcohol
is oxidized to a ketone and that's it. Now what happens if I want to oxidize a tertiary
alcohol? The answer is I can't! In order to oxidize, I have to remove hydrogen, carbon
doesn't have any. I have to gain a bond to oxygen, well how? If carbon already has four
bonds and I try to add a fifth bond by creating that double bond, we've just violated carbon's
octet. It has five bonds when the max is four and that can't happen. So you cannot oxidize
a tertiary alcohol. If you see this on the exam, just write n slash r for no reaction. The trickiest aspect of redox, in my opinion,
are all the reagents. Every time you learn a reaction you learn 1,2,3,4 and it can get
very very overwhelming. I don't want you to focus on which reagent does what instead I
want you to understand why and how they do it. Let's look at some of the common oxidation
reagents you're going to see. KMnO4, CrO3, O3, any form of Cr2O72 minus, in this case
we have Na2 or K2 to balance it. And now let's look at reduction. Common ones you'll see
are LAH which is lithium aluminum hydride, NaBH4 Sodium Borohydride and more. Look at
what we see in the reagents. If Oxidation is gaining bonds to oxygen, should we not
use a reagent that is absolutely overflowing with oxygen atoms? So overflowing that it
is available to donate it to the molecule. If the reduction is a loss of Oxygen or gain
of Hydrogen, should we not use a reagent that is packed with hydrogen atoms? That is what
you're looking for. So if you're trying to figure out if it's oxidation or reduction,
ask yourself, what atom do I see in my reagent? How can that possibly influence my product? Be sure to join me in upcoming videos where
we break down the reagents, break down the mechanisms and show you what happens with
every specific type of oxidation or reduction for all the common ones you see in Organic
Chemistry. You can find the entire series along with my redox practice quiz and cheat
sheets by visiting my website leah4sci.com/redox