In organic chemistry, 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (2,4-DNPH), also known as Brady’s reagent, is a chemical compound widely used as a qualitative test to detect the presence of the carbonyl functional group (C=O) found in aldehydes and ketones.
1. The Test Reagent
2,4-DNPH is a red-to-orange crystalline solid. Because it is relatively insoluble in water, Brady's reagent is typically prepared by dissolving 2,4-DNPH in a mixture of methanol and concentrated sulfuric acid. The acid acts as a vital catalyst for the chemical reaction.
2. Chemical Reaction & Mechanism
The test relies on a nucleophilic addition-elimination (condensation) reaction. The hydrazine group (-NH-NH2) of the reagent attacks the electrophilic carbon atom of the carbonyl group. This is followed by the elimination of a water molecule, yielding a structured derivative called a 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone.
The General Equation:
- Protonation: The acid catalyst protonates the carbonyl oxygen, making the carbonyl carbon highly electrophilic.
- Nucleophilic Attack: The terminal nitrogen atom of 2,4-DNPH attacks the carbon atom, forming a carbon-nitrogen single bond.
- Proton Transfer & Elimination: A proton shifts from the nitrogen to the oxygen atom. Finally, a molecule of water (H2O) is eliminated, resulting in a stable carbon-nitrogen double bond (C=N).
3. Observations and Results
When a few drops of an aldehyde or ketone are added to Brady's reagent, a distinct structural transition occurs, manifesting visually almost instantly.
Positive Visual Test:
The formation of a distinct, crystalline yellow, orange, or red precipitate indicates the presence of a carbonyl group.
- Yellow precipitates typically point to unconjugated carbonyl compounds (e.g., aliphatic aldehydes or ketones like acetone).
- Orange or Red precipitates usually signify a carbonyl group conjugated with an aromatic ring or a carbon-carbon double bond (e.g., benzaldehyde).
Negative Test:
If the solution remains a clear orange/yellow liquid with no precipitate formation, the compound lacks an aldehyde or ketone functional group. Note that other carbonyl-containing functional groups like carboxylic acids, esters, and amides do not react with 2,4-DNPH due to resonance stabilization of their carbonyl carbon.
4. Advanced Application: Derivative Melting Point Characterization
Beyond simple qualitative detection ("Is a carbonyl group present?"), 2,4-DNPH can be used to identify the exact identity of the unknown aldehyde or ketone:
- The reaction is carried out, and the resulting solid hydrazone precipitate is filtered and collected.
- The solid is purified through a process called recrystallization (usually using ethanol).
- The melting point of the purified crystals is measured using a melting point apparatus.
- This unique experimental melting point is compared against a reference table of known 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone melting points to identify the specific starting molecule.
| Starting Carbonyl Compound | Boiling Point of Compound (°C) | Melting Point of 2,4-DNPH Derivative (°C) |
|---|---|---|
| Ethanal (Acetaldehyde) | 21 | 168 |
| Propanone (Acetone) | 56 | 126 |
| Benzaldehyde | 178 | 237 |
Which of the following compounds will give a positive orange precipitate when treated with 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (Brady's Reagent)?
A) Propan-1-ol
B) Propanone
C) Propanoic acid
D) Ethyl ethanoate
View Answer
Option B (Propanone) is the correct answer.
Explanation:
2,4-DNPH (Brady's Reagent) is specifically used as a distinction test to detect the presence of a carbonyl group (C=O) in aldehydes and ketones. It undergoes a condensation reaction to form a bright yellow/orange crystalline precipitate (a hydrazone).
- Propanone (B) is a ketone, so it gives a positive orange precipitate.
- Propan-1-ol (A) is an alcohol, Propanoic acid (C) is a carboxylic acid, and Ethyl ethanoate (D) is an ester—none of these react with Brady's reagent.