Carboxylic Acids (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Philippa Platt

Expertise

Chemistry

The Carboxylic Acid Functional Group

  • Carboxylic acids are a homologous series of compounds that have the general formula of

CnH2n+1 COOH 

The general formula of a carboxylic acid

Diagram of the general structure of a carboxylic acid
The general structure of a carboxylic acid. The R- represents a varying hydrocarbon chain
  • Ethanoic acid has the formula CH3COOH

  • They differ by one -CH2 in the molecular formulae from one member to the next

The first three carboxylic acids

A diagram to show the structure of the first three carboxylic acids
The name, formula and displayed formula of the first three carboxylic acids

Properties of Carboxylic Acids

  • Carboxylic acids react with carbonates to form a salt, water and carbon dioxide

    • During this reaction fizzing is seen so can be used as a test to identify carbonate ions:

carboxylic acid + carbonate ⟶ salt + water + carbon dioxide

ethanoic acid + calcium carbonate ⟶ calcium ethanoate + water + carbon dioxide

2CH3COOH + CaCO3 ⟶ Ca(CH3COO)2 + H2O + CO2

  • In the presence of a catalyst (usually concentrated sulfuric acid) carboxylic acids react with alcohols to produce esters

  • Esters are compounds with the functional group R-COO-R

  • Ethanoic acid will react with ethanol in the presence of concentrated sulfuric acid (catalyst) to form ethyl ethanoate:

ethanoic acid + ethanol → ethyl ethanoate + water

CH3COOH + C2H5OH → CH3COOC2H5 + H2O

  • Carboxylic acids dissolve in water to produce acidic solutions and have pH values of between 3 and 7 which means they are classed as weak acids

  • They do not fully dissociate when dissolved in water therefore form an equilibrium with their ions

    • Most carboxylic acid molecules remain un dissociated:

CH3COOH ⇌ H+ + CH3COO

  • This means that at the same concentration as strong acids, carboxylic acids will have a higher pH

Exam Tip

You are expected to write balanced chemical equations for the reactions of carboxylic acids.

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Philippa Platt

Author: Philippa Platt

Philippa has worked as a GCSE and A level chemistry teacher and tutor for over thirteen years. She studied chemistry and sport science at Loughborough University graduating in 2007 having also completed her PGCE in science. Throughout her time as a teacher she was incharge of a boarding house for five years and coached many teams in a variety of sports. When not producing resources with the chemistry team, Philippa enjoys being active outside with her young family and is a very keen gardener