Fischer–Speier esterification
Fischer esterification or Fischer–Speier esterification is a special type of esterification by refluxing a carboxylic acid and an alcohol in the presence of an acid catalyst. The reaction was first described by Emil Fischer and Arthur Speier in 1895. Most carboxylic acids are suitable for the reaction, but the alcohol should generally be primary or secondary. Tertiary alcohols are prone to elimination. Contrary to common misconception found in organic chemistry textbooks, phenols can also be esterified to give good to near quantitative yield of products. Commonly used catalysts for a Fischer esterification include sulfuric acid, p-toluenesulfonic acid, and Lewis acids such as scandium triflate. For more valuable or sensitive substrates other, milder procedures such as Steglich esterification are used. The reaction is often carried out without a solvent or in a non-polar solvent that can facilitate Dean–Stark distillation to remove the water byproduct. Typical reaction times vary from 1–10 hours at temperatures of 60–110 °C.
Direct acylations of alcohols with carboxylic acids is preferred over acylations with anhydrides or acid chlorides. The main disadvantage of direct acylation is the unfavorable chemical equilibrium that must be remedied, or by the removal of water.
Overview
Fischer esterification is an acyl substitution reaction based on the electrophilicity of the carbonyl carbon and the nucleophilicity of an alcohol. Carboxylic acids tend to be deprotonated by nucleophiles, which gives an unreactive carboxylate. Although kinetically very stable in the absence of catalysts, esters tend to eventually hydrolyse in the presence of water.Several steps can be taken to turn this unfavourable reaction into a favourable one.
The reaction mechanism for this reaction has several steps:
- Proton transfer from acid catalyst to carbonyl oxygen increases electrophilicity of carbonyl carbon.
- The carbonyl carbon is then attacked by the nucleophilic oxygen atom of the alcohol
- Proton transfer from the oxonium ion to a second molecule of the alcohol gives an activated complex
- Protonation of one of the hydroxy groups of the activated complex gives a new oxonium ion.
- Loss of water from this oxonium ion and subsequent deprotonation gives the ester.
Image:Fischer esterification mechanism.svg|none|Fischer esterification mechanism
Advantages and disadvantages
Advantages
The primary advantages of Fischer esterification compared to other esterification processes are based on its relative simplicity. Straightforward acidic conditions can be used if acid-sensitive functional groups are not an issue; sulfuric acid can be used; weaker acids can be used with a tradeoff of longer reaction times. Because the reagents used are "direct," there is less environmental impact in terms of waste products and harmfulness of the reagents. Alkyl halides are potential greenhouse gases or ozone depletors, carcinogens, and possible ecological poisons. Acid chlorides evolve hydrogen chloride gas upon contact with atmospheric moisture, are corrosive, react vigorously with water and other nucleophiles ; they are easily quenched by other nucleophiles besides the desired alcohol; their most common synthesis routes involve the evolution of toxic carbon monoxide or sulfur dioxide gases.Acid anhydrides are more reactive than esters because the leaving group is a carboxylate anion—a better leaving group than an alkoxide anion because their negative charge is more delocalised. However, such routes generally result in poor atom economy. For example, in reacting ethanol with acetic anhydride, ethyl acetate forms and acetic acid is eliminated as a leaving group, which is considerably less reactive than an acid anhydride and will be left as a byproduct if product is collected immediately. If conditions are acidic enough, the acetic acid can be further reacted via the Fischer esterification pathway, but at a much slower pace. However, in many carefully designed syntheses, reagents can be designed such that acid anhydrides are generated in situ and carboxylic acid byproducts are reactivated, and Fischer esterification routes are not necessarily mutually exclusive with acetic anhydride routes. Examples of this include the common undergraduate organic lab experiment involving the acetylation of salicylic acid to yield aspirin.
Fischer esterification is primarily a thermodynamically-controlled process: because of its slowness, the most stable ester tends to be the major product. This can be a desirable trait if there are multiple reaction sites and side product esters to be avoided. In contrast, rapid reactions involving acid anhydrides or acid chlorides are often kinetically-controlled.