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Organic Chemistry!!! Chapters 22, 23 and 24
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Organic Chemistry The study of carbon and carbon compounds MUCH more abundant than inorganic compounds
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BONDING Organic Compounds bond covalently Share electrons Form molecules
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MORE BONDING Carbon atoms bond to one another in: Chains: C-C-C-C-C-C Rings: Networks:
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Even More Bonding Carbon atoms have 4 valence electrons EN=2.6 (forms mostly covalent bonds) Shares 4 electrons with other atoms to attain octet
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Types of Covalent Bonds Carbon atoms may form: Single bonds Double bonds Triple bonds
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Structural Formulas Represents the arrangement of atoms in a compound Indicates bonding pattern and shapes CH 4 CH 3 OH CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 OH Tetrahedral shape-CH 4 : 4 bonds spread out to the 4 corners
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ISOMERS Compounds with same molecular formula, but different structural formulas Same # and type of atoms, different arrangement (bonding patterns different)
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ISOMERS C 3 H 6 O (molecular formula) CH 3 COCH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CHO (structural formulas)
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HYDROCARBONS Compounds that contain only C and H atoms Saturated: contain only single bonds Unsaturated: contain at least 1 multiple bond (double or triple)
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Homologous Series of Hydrocarbons TABLE Q Group of organic compounds with similar properties and related structures
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Homologous Series The formulas of members of a h. s. differ from each other by some common increment As molecular size increases, increase weak imf, increase b.p., increase f.p. (harder to melt)
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ALKANES Single bonds only (saturated) Table Q: C n H 2n+2 Prefix: # of carbons in longest chain (Table P) Ending: -ane Isomers show up starting with C 4 H 10 butane
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ALKENES One double bond between carbons (unsaturated) Table Q: C n H 2n Prefix: Table P (# of C in longest chain) Ending: -ene Position of the double bond may vary (isomers)
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Alkenes Longest chain is numbered, starting at end closest to double bond The lower # of C with double bond precedes the name of the hydrocarbon
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ALKYNES One triple bond between carbons (unsaturated) Table Q: C n H 2n-2 Prefix: Table P (# C in longest C chain) Ending: -yne Position of the triple bond may vary (isomers)
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Alkynes Longest chain is numbered, starting at end closest to triple bond Lower # of the C with triple bond precedes the name of the hydrocarbon
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Other Organic Compounds- Table R Replace 1 or more hydrogen atoms with other element or group Replacement is called a functional group
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HALIDES (Group 17) R-X Replace H in a hydrocarbon with halogen Halogen name is shortened to end in -o There can be more than 1 halogen added to a hydrocarbon (replace more than 1 H) Prefixes to indicate number
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ALCOHOLS Functional group: -OH (R-OH) -OH is alcohol in organic, base in inorganic Alcohol: does not form hydroxide ion in solution; not an ionic compound but a molecule
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Naming Alcohols Number of C attached to it (if 3 or more C) Name hydrocarbon first Replace final -e with -ol Classes of alcohols: Monohydroxy: one -OH group Dihydroxy: two -OH groups Trihydroxy: three -OH groups
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1-propanol
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Ethers Functional Group: -O- ; R 1 -O-R 2 Diethyl ether (solvent and anesthetic) C 2 H 5 OC 2 H 5 Methyl ethyl ether CH 3 OCH 2 CH 3
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diethylether
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Methyl ethyl ether
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ALdehydes Functional group: -C=O Naming: replace the -e of hydrocarbon with -al Only one available bonding site, usually found at end of chain H
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Methanal (formaldehyde)
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ketones Naming: replace the ending -e with -one Simplest ketone is when R 1 and R 2 are methyl groups (-CH 3 ) Ketones are isomers of aldehydes (ketones have 2 R groups, aldehydes 1 R)
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ketONEs
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Propanone (acetone)
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OrganIC ACID Functional Group: -COOH
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To name organic acids Replace ending -e with -oic acid Methanoic acid:
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Ester COOC- R ’ is named first (group attached to the -O-), -e is replaced with -yl R is named next (group attached to -C) -e is replaced by -oate
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Methyl ethanoate
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Amine Naming: drop the -e and replace with -amine
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Amides Combines a carbonyl (double bonded oxygen) and an amine on the same C.
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Amides Naming: replace -e with -amide
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General Characteristics of Organic Compounds molecular compounds (contrast with ionic compounds) NONPOLAR (mostly) Few dissolve in water (polar) Vinegar (acetic acid) Various sugars and alcohols (all have -OH like water)
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More characteristics Nonelectrolytes Not ionic COOH (organic acids) are weak electrolytes Low melting points (weak IMFs) Slow reaction rates High E a needed Catalysts used Covalent bonds are strong (harder to break)
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Organic Reactions Organic reactions occur at much slower rates than inorganic reactions In an organic reaction, the functional groups are usually involved TABLE R!!!
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Combustion Saturated hydrocarbon + O 2 CO 2 + H 2 O + heat Energy derived by combustion and cellular respiration Oxidation reactions (oxygen involved)
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Substitution Occurs in saturated hydrocarbons (alkanes) Replace a hydrogen with another element or group More than 1 product is typical
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Substitution Ethane + bromine bromoethane + hydrogen bromide C 2 H 6 + Br 2 C 2 H 5 Br + HBr
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Addition Adding two or more atoms to C-atoms in unsaturated hydrocarbons Usually saturates the bond makes a single bond Takes place more easily than substitution reactions Unsaturated compounds more reactive than saturated compounds
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Addition continued Triple bonds (alkynes) more reactive than double bonds (alkenes) Reactivity: alkynes > alkenes > alkanes Addition of H= hydrogenation Requires a catalyst and elevated temperature “partially hydrogenated oils” Characterized by the formation of a single product
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Fermentation Molecules broken down Alcohol production (CO 2 made also- carbonation) Usually associated with living organisms Yeast Enzymes serve as catalysts
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Fermentation Example Fermentation of Glucose Zymase- made by yeast
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Esterification Organic acid + alcohol ester + water Esters have a first and last name (R’ and R) R’= first name: alcohol name with -yl ending R= last name: organic acid name with -oate ending Example: ethanoic acid + methanol --> methyl ethanoate + water
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Esters Are responsible for aromas Fruits, flowers, leaves Lipids (fats and oils) are esters Made from glycerol and fatty acids Compared to inorganic process of neutralization (Acid + Base salt + water)
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Saponification Making soap Animal fat + base soap + glycerol Hydrolysis of fats (complex esters) by bases Break apart esters Reverse of esterification Break esters into acid and alcohol
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Polymerization Make a long chain (polymer) by bonding smaller chains (monomers) Plastics, nylon, rayon, proteins, starches, cellulose Two types of polymerization: Condensation Addition
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Condensation Bond monomers by dehydration (removing water) Monomer + monomer polymer + H 2 O
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Addition Join monomers of unsaturated compounds by “opening” a multiple bond of the carbon chain
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