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Applied Organic Chemistry
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What is Organic Chemistry? Study of carbon-based compounds
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What are some examples of carbon-based compounds? Fuel Plastics Drugs Food Explosives Life
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Fuel Example: petroleum Used as an energy source Contains carbon and hydrogen Reacts with oxygen to produce heat for energy and releases carbon dioxide
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Plastics Halocarbons Contain a halogen, such as flourine covalently bonded to carbon Other halocarbons: CFCs, DDT Hazards: plastics do not biodegrade, they photodegrade, CFCs damage the ozone layer, DDT is harmful to animal populations, is a water pollutant, and is a carcinogen
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Drugs Most medicines are organic compounds All illegal drugs are organic compounds
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Food Carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids are all organic compounds Examples: sugar, fruits, vegetables, etc Cons: Americans throw away ¼ to ½ of food (26 millions tons/year), jams up landfills, and hugely contributes to greenhouse gas emissions (methane) What you can do: freeze, can, donate food, start a compost pile
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Life Life on Earth depends on carbon ALL life contains carbon
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What types of careers use organic chemistry? Vets Doctors Dentists Pharmacists Chemists
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Bonding in Organic Compounds Covalent bonds 2 or more atoms SHARE valence electrons Gain a full octet Valence electrons: electrons in outermost energy level Octet: atoms want 8 electrons (full outer shell) to be stable
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Structures formed by carbon compounds Carbon is unique because it can form: Chains Branched chains Rings single, double, and triple bonds Alkanes: single bonded Alkenes: double bonded Alkynes: triple bonded
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Isomers Carbon structures with identifcal chemical formulas (made of the same stuff) Different structures (shaped differently)
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Isomer Example
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