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Carbon Chemistry.

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Presentation on theme: "Carbon Chemistry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Carbon Chemistry

2 9.5 Content Standard D 13. Explain how the structure of the carbon atom affects the type of bonds it forms in organic and inorganic molecules.

3 What’s so special about Carbon?
Fourth most abundant element in the universe. Essential to life on earth. Many different forms… carbon dioxide (CO2), limestone (CaCO3), wood, plastic, diamonds, and graphite.

4 Carbon – The Element of Life
Unique atomic structure… form covalent bonds with up to four other atoms. Elements with either less or more than 4 valence electrons can only form a maximum of 3 covalent bonds, this is why 4 is a magic number and why carbon is special. Lightest element (and therefore the smallest) with four valence electrons

5 Carbon Structures Chains Rings Branches

6 Carbon Bonds Single Double Triple

7 Carbon Recall How many valence electrons does carbon have?
What 3 types of structures does carbon form? Rings, Chains, and Branches

8 Inorganic Compounds Inorganic compounds are those compounds that were never part of a living organism Does not contain both hydrogen and carbon. Can include carbon or hydrogen but no both elements at same time. Examples: Carbon dioxide and Carbon monoxide The line between inorganic and organic carbon compounds is becoming less and less important to scientists as many non-living compounds are derived from once living organisms.

9 Organic Compounds Organic compounds are those compounds found in any organism that is living or was once living. Chemically any compound that contains both carbon and hydrogen. They include carbohydrates such as glucose, fructose, and sucrose And hydrocarbons such as methane and hexane

10 Carbon Recall What is the difference between organic & inorganic compounds? Give an example of an organic compound. Give an example of an inorganic compound.

11 Carbohydrates (Organic)
Monosaccharides- One unit (Simple Sugar) Disaccharides- Two units (Simple Sugar) Glucose- stored in our body Fructose- sugar in fruit Sucrose- one glucose + one fructose = table sugar

12 Carbohydrates (Organic)
Polysaccharides- Many units (Complex Carbs) Starch- a long chain of glucose- found in plants Similarly, Glycogen is glucose stored in animals and humans. Cellulose is glucose chains linked together and forms strong plant fibers.

13 Isomers Isomers- “Iso” means equal “mers” parts Definition: Molecules with the same chemical formula but different chemical structures.

14 Isomers

15 Hydrocarbons (Organic)
Hydrocarbons- molecules only containing Carbon + Hydrogen Isomers of Octane- often added to gasoline to stop the “knock” in the engine

16 Saturated vs Unsaturated
Saturated hydrocarbons have the maximum amount of hydrogens possible. Hydrocarbons with all single bonds are considered to be saturated. Alkanes Unsaturated hydrocarbons do not have the maximum amount of hydrogens possible. Any hydrocarbon with double or triple bonds are unsaturated. Alkenes and Alkynes

17 Saturated vs Unsaturated

18 Prefix # Carbons Name Formula Structure Meth 1 Methane CH4 Eth 2 Ethane C2H6 Prop 3 Propane C3H8 But 4 Butane C4H10 Pent 5 Pentane C5H12 Hex 6 Hexane C6H14 Hept 7 Heptane C7H16 Oct 8 Octane C8H18 Non 9 Nonane C9H20

19 Properties of Hydrocarbons
Hydrocarbons are the simplest organic compounds, made up of only two elements -- they have low melting and boiling points -- hydrocarbons are flammable and tend to burn in combustion reactions -- hydrocarbons mix poorly with water (they are nonpolar) -- hydrocarbons are used for many of our fuels such as heating oil, diesel fuel, gasoline, coal and methane.

20 Carbon Recall Name two examples of organic molecules.
Carbohydrates & Hydrocarbons Name one characteristic of hydrocarbons. Do not dissolve in water


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