Hi,
The acetylation of Cafeic acid with acetic anhydride has been conducted in aqueous 1M NaOH with excellent yield.
5,6 mmol of Cafeic acid were deprotonated in 19,0 mmol of cold 1M sodium hydroxide. 15,0 mmol of acetic anhydride were slowly added to the mixture resulting in precipitation of the product.
Why does the reaction work so well? I was skeptical of the efficiency of conducting an esterification in water, for obvious reasons, but I was proven wrong. Here is the likely mechanism:
What I have reasoned so far is that my reactant is in such excess that the reaction can still come close to 100% yield. But I'm still not exactly happy with this explanation. I'm also wondering how can all of the acidic protons be eaten by NaOH...
Here are my questions:
1) Why does the reaction work if it's conducted in water?
2) How can NaOH deprotonate the acid and BOTH alcohols?
3) How does the configuration of benzenic diols affect their acidity?
And more specifically
4) In the case of ortho diols, does deprotonation of a first one facilitate deprotonation of the second?
Thank you very much!
PS: ChemDraw doesn't seem to like PNG, hence the missing "OH" and misplaced "AcO" in the image above.