Properties & Reactions of Esters | chemca

Properties & Reactions of Esters | chemca
Organic Chemistry

Properties and Reactions of Esters

Physical trends, Hydrolysis (Saponification), Reduction, and Condensation.

By chemca Team • Updated Jan 2026

Esters ($RCOOR'$) are pleasant-smelling compounds widely used in flavors and fragrances. Their chemical reactivity is dominated by nucleophilic acyl substitution at the carbonyl carbon and reactions involving the $\alpha$-hydrogen.

1. Physical Properties

  • Odor: Lower esters have pleasant, fruity smells (e.g., Isoamyl acetate smells like banana).
  • Boiling Point: Esters cannot form intermolecular Hydrogen bonds with each other. Thus, their boiling points are lower than isomeric acids and alcohols, but comparable to aldehydes/ketones of similar mass.
  • Solubility: Lower members are soluble in water due to H-bonding with water molecules. Solubility decreases as the alkyl chain grows.

2. Hydrolysis Reactions

Cleavage of Ester Bond

A. Acidic Hydrolysis: Reversible reaction catalyzed by dilute acid ($H^+$).
$$ RCOOR' + H_2O \xrightleftharpoons{H^+} \underset{\text{Carboxylic Acid}}{RCOOH} + \underset{\text{Alcohol}}{R'OH} $$
B. Alkaline Hydrolysis (Saponification): Irreversible reaction with aqueous base ($NaOH/KOH$).
$$ RCOOR' + NaOH \xrightarrow{\Delta} \underset{\text{Sodium Salt (Soap)}}{RCOO^-Na^+} + R'OH $$
Why Irreversible? The carboxylic acid formed immediately reacts with the base to form a stable carboxylate salt, preventing the reverse reaction.

3. Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution

Replacement of Alkoxy Group

A. Ammonolysis: Reaction with Ammonia ($NH_3$) or amines to form Amides.
$$ RCOOR' + NH_3 \rightarrow \underset{\text{Amide}}{RCONH_2} + R'OH $$
B. Transesterification (Alcoholysis): Reaction with an excess of another alcohol ($R''OH$) in the presence of acid or base catalyst to exchange the alkoxy group.
$$ RCOOR' + R''OH \xrightleftharpoons{H^+ \text{ or } RO^-} RCOOR'' + R'OH $$

Used in Biodiesel production.

4. Reduction Reactions

Conversion to Alcohols

Esters are reduced to a mixture of two alcohols: one corresponding to the acyl group and the other to the alkoxy group.

A. Catalytic Hydrogenation ($H_2/Ni$) or $LiAlH_4$:
$$ RCOOR' + 4[H] \xrightarrow{LiAlH_4} RCH_2OH + R'OH $$
B. Bouveault-Blanc Reduction: Reduction using Sodium and Ethanol ($Na / C_2H_5OH$).
$$ RCOOR' \xrightarrow{Na / C_2H_5OH} RCH_2OH + R'OH $$

5. Claisen Condensation

Self-Condensation

Esters having at least one $\alpha$-hydrogen atom undergo self-condensation in the presence of a strong base like Sodium Ethoxide ($C_2H_5ONa$) to form $\beta$-Keto Esters.

$$ 2 \underset{\text{Ethyl Acetate}}{CH_3COOC_2H_5} \xrightarrow{1. C_2H_5ONa, 2. H^+} \underset{\text{Ethyl Acetoacetate ($\beta$-Keto Ester)}}{CH_3COCH_2COOC_2H_5} + C_2H_5OH $$
Mechanism: The base abstracts an $\alpha$-proton to form an enolate ion, which then attacks the carbonyl carbon of another ester molecule (Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution).

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