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Understand Ester Nomenclature using IUPAC rules
ESTER | Class 10 | CBSE & SEBA Board
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Ester Nomenclature –
IUPAC Rules (Class 11 CBSE/SEBA)
π§ Think of an ester as a “chemical child” of an acid and an alcohol.
The alcohol gives the first name, the acid gives the second name.
① What is an Ester?
An ester is formed when a carboxylic acid reacts with an alcohol.
General Structure: R–COO–R′
General Structure: R–COO–R′
π Break the structure mentally into two parts:
- R–COO → Acid part
- R′ → Alcohol (alkyl) part
② Esterification Reaction
Carboxylic Acid + Alcohol → Ester + Water
CH₃COOH + CH₃OH → CH₃COOCH₃ + H₂O
(Ethanoic acid + Methanol → Methyl ethanoate + Water)
π‘ Remove –OH from acid and –H from alcohol → Water forms!
③ Step-by-Step IUPAC Naming Rules
- Identify the alkyl group (R′) from alcohol → Write it first.
- Identify the acid part → Change suffix “-oic acid” → “-oate.”
- Write as: Alkyl + Alkanoate
π§ Formula to remember:
Alcohol first, Acid last.
Think: “Who came from alcohol?” → That name goes first!
④ Detailed Examples (Think & Decode)
| Structure | Alcohol Part | Acid Part | IUPAC Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| CH₃COOCH₃ | Methyl | Ethanoate | Methyl ethanoate |
| CH₃COOC₂H₅ | Ethyl | Ethanoate | Ethyl ethanoate |
| C₂H₅COOCH₃ | Methyl | Propanoate | Methyl propanoate |
| HCOOC₂H₅ | Ethyl | Methanoate | Ethyl methanoate |
| CH₃CH₂CH₂COOCH₃ | Methyl | Butanoate | Methyl butanoate |
| CH₃COOCH₂CH₂CH₃ | Propyl | Ethanoate | Propyl ethanoate |
⑤ Advanced Thinking Rules (For Strong Memory Encoding)
✔ Count carbon atoms including carbonyl carbon in acid part.
✔ Ignore oxygen while counting main carbon chain.
✔ Branches in alcohol part are named as alkyl substituents.
✔ Numbering is always done from carbonyl carbon (C=O).
π§ Visual Trick:
The C=O carbon is always carbon number 1.
Everything grows away from it.
⑥ Practice Brain Activation
Q1: Name the compound CH₃CH₂COOCH₂CH₃
Ethyl propanoate
Q2: Name HCOOCH₃
Methyl methanoate
π Repeat aloud:
“Alkyl first, Acid becomes oate.”
Repetition strengthens neural pathways.
⑦ General Formula
Saturated Monocarboxylic Esters:
CβH₂βO₂
⑧ Uses of Esters
- πΈ Fragrances & perfumes
- π Natural fruit flavors
- π Solvents (ethyl acetate)
- π Pharmaceuticals
π Many fruit smells are esters —
When you smell a fruit, you are sensing organic chemistry!
π³️ Quick Recall Poll
Which rule helps you remember ester nomenclature most effectively?
- π Alcohol name comes first
- π Acid changes to “-oate”
- π Carbonyl carbon is always C-1
- π Breaking structure into two parts
Esters – Deep Conceptual Understanding
π§ If acids are sharp and alcohols are simple,
esters are elegant — pleasant smell, reactive center, and beautiful chemistry.
① Structure of Ester – Electronic View
General structure: R–C(=O)–O–R′
Key functional group: –COO–
Key functional group: –COO–
π The carbonyl carbon (C=O) is:
- Electrophilic (electron deficient)
- Partially positive (Ξ΄⁺)
- Reactive towards nucleophiles
⚡ Think: Oxygen pulls electrons → Carbon becomes hungry → Reaction happens.
② Types of Esters
Esters can be classified as:
- Aliphatic esters
- Aromatic esters
- Cyclic esters (Lactones)
- Polyesters
Aromatic Ester Example:
C₆H₅COOCH₃ → Methyl benzoate
C₆H₅COOCH₃ → Methyl benzoate
Cyclic Ester (Lactone):
Formed when –OH and –COOH are in same molecule.
Formed when –OH and –COOH are in same molecule.
π When acid and alcohol are in same molecule → ring forms → Lactone.
③ Physical Properties
✔ Pleasant fruity smell
✔ Lower boiling point than acids
✔ Slightly polar
✔ Insoluble in water (long chain esters)
✔ Lower boiling point than acids
✔ Slightly polar
✔ Insoluble in water (long chain esters)
❓ Why lower boiling point than acids?
Because esters cannot form strong hydrogen bonding like acids.
Because esters cannot form strong hydrogen bonding like acids.
④ Chemical Reactions of Esters
1️⃣ Hydrolysis (Acidic or Basic)
2️⃣ Saponification
3️⃣ Reduction
4️⃣ Transesterification
2️⃣ Saponification
3️⃣ Reduction
4️⃣ Transesterification
Acidic Hydrolysis:
Ester + Water → Acid + Alcohol
Ester + Water → Acid + Alcohol
Basic Hydrolysis (Saponification):
Ester + NaOH → Salt + Alcohol
Ester + NaOH → Salt + Alcohol
π§Ό Soap making = Saponification.
Fats are esters of glycerol.
⑤ Ester vs Acid vs Alcohol (Comparison)
| Property | Acid | Alcohol | Ester |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smell | Pungent | Mild | Pleasant |
| Boiling Point | High | Medium | Lower |
| Hydrogen Bonding | Strong | Moderate | Weak |
⑥ Special Naming Situations
✔ If acid is aromatic → name based on benzoate.
✔ If alcohol is branched → include branching in alkyl name.
✔ For substituted esters → number from carbonyl carbon.
✔ If alcohol is branched → include branching in alkyl name.
✔ For substituted esters → number from carbonyl carbon.
(CH₃)₂CH–OH + CH₃COOH → Isopropyl ethanoate
π§ Always identify alcohol part first — even if complex.
⑦ Polyesters – Industrial Importance
Formed by reaction of:
- Dicarboxylic acid
- Diol (two –OH groups)
Terylene / PET formation:
Ethylene glycol + Terephthalic acid
π§΅ Polyester fibers in clothes = Long chains of repeating ester linkages.
⑧ Brain-Strengthening Practice
Q1: Name C₆H₅COOCH₂CH₃
Ethyl benzoate
Q2: What is formed when ethyl ethanoate reacts with NaOH?
Sodium ethanoate + Ethanol
π Write 5 ester names from memory without looking.
Retrieval strengthens long-term memory.
⑨ Conceptual Mastery Question
Why are esters less acidic than carboxylic acids?
Because esters lack –OH hydrogen that can ionize.
π― Acidic hydrogen is absent in esters → No easy proton donation.
π³️ Reflection Poll
Which area of ester chemistry interests you most?
- π Naming rules
- π Reaction mechanisms
- π Industrial polymers
- π Biological importance