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Introduction to Organic Chemistry
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Defining “Organic” An organic compound is one containing carbon. Exceptions: Carbon oxides Carbides Carbonates
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Millions of Compounds Carbon is unique among elements in that it can bond to other carbon atoms to form chains containing as many as several thousand atoms. C The Lewis structure for carbon shows that it has four valence electrons, so can form four bonds.
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Because a carbon atom can bond to as many as four other atoms at once, these chains can have branches and form closed- ring structures that make possible an almost endless variety of compounds. In addition, carbon can bond strongly to elements such as oxygen and nitrogen, and it can form double and triple bonds.
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Thus, carbon forms an enormous number of compounds with chains and rings of various sizes, each with a variety of bond types and atoms of other elements bonded to them. Fortunately, you don’t need to study each of these millions of compounds to understand organic chemistry because they can be classified into groups of compounds that have similar structures and properties.
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The simplest organic compound The simplest organic compounds are hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons contain only two elements: carbon hydrogen Two main types of hydrocarbons: saturated unsaturated
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Saturated Hydrocarbons A hydrocarbon in which all the carbon atoms are connected to each other by single bonds is called a saturated hydrocarbon. Another name for a saturated hydrocarbon is an alkane. Alkanes are the simplest hydrocarbons.
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Properties of Alkanes Properties depend on the structure or arrangement of atoms present in a molecule. Another factor that affects properties of alkanes is chain length. In general, the more carbons present in a straight- chain alkane, the higher its melting and boiling points. A property shared by all alkanes is that they are relatively unreactive.
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The carbons in an alkane can be arranged in a chain or a ring, and both chains and rings can have branches of other carbon chains attached to them.
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These are the names of the first ten alkanes and their molecular formulas. KNOW them
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Alkanes that have no branches are called straight-chain alkanes. Most alkanes have a branched structure. In these compounds, a chain of one or more carbons is attached to a carbon in the longest continuous chain, which is called the parent chain.
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The parent chain is 3 carbons long. It is propane. There is a 1-carbon branch off the second carbon (carbon #2). 1-carbon branch off the second carbon parent chain has 3 carbons, so it is propane
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To name a branched alkane, you must be able to answer three questions about its structure. 1.How many carbons are in the longest chain? (parent chain) 2.How many branches are on the longest chain and what are their sizes? 3.To which carbons in the parent chain are the branches attached?
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For convenience, the carbon atoms in organic compounds are given position numbers. In straight-chain hydrocarbons, the numbering can begin at either end. It makes no difference. 123 4 1234
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In branched hydrocarbons, the numbering begins at the end closest to the branch. 1 2 3 4 Four carbons are in the longest continuous chain, so butane is the parent chain and will be part of the compound’s name.
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There is only one branch, and it contains one carbon.
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Instead of calling this a methane branch, change the -ane in methane to -yl. Thus, this is a methyl branch. Because the methyl branch is attached to the second carbon of the butane chain, this compound has the name 2-methylbutane.
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Now, examine the structure of a different hydrocarbon. 1 2 3 Propane will be part of this compound’s name because the longest continuous chain has three carbons. Two methyl branches are present, both on the second carbon.
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To indicate the presence of more than one branch of the same kind, use the same Greek prefixes for naming covalent compounds. The prefix to use when two of anything are present is di-. Thus, the name of this compound is 2,2- dimethylpropane.
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Isomers Compounds that have the same molecular formula but different structures are called isomers. Butane and 2-methylpropane are known as structural isomers. Each has the molecular formula C 4 H 10, but they have different structural formulas because the carbon chains have different shapes.
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Butane, C 4 H 10 2-methylpropane, C 4 H 10
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Halocarbons Sometimes, a halogen can be substituted for a branch in a hydrocarbon. These compounds are called halocarbons. Halocarbons are named using the beginning of the name of each halogen: Fluoro- Chloro- Bromo- Iodo-
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This is 2-chloropropane
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Cycloalkanes Alkanes can also be arranged into carbon rings. These are called cycloalkanes. They are named just like chain alkanes with the prefix cyclo-.
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Cycloalkanes Here is the simplest cycloalkane: cyclopropane
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Cycloalkanes cyclopropane cyclobutane cyclopentane These can be drawn as simple geometric shapes, the corners represent carbons and the hydrogen atoms are left off but understood to be there.
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Name this alkane! 2-methylbutane
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2,3-dimethylpentane
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3-ethyl-4-methytlheptane
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cyclohexane
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3-ethyl-2,3-dimethylhexane
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1,2-dimethylcyclohexane
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