1 / 43

Organic Chemistry

Organic Chemistry. Hydrocarbons. Contain only carbon and hydrogen Carbon (4 valence e - ) will ALWAYS form four bonds. Alkanes. Only single covalent bonds C 1 -C 4 —gases at room temp. C 5 -C 10 —liquids at room temp. C 11 and up—solids at room temp.

renardo
Download Presentation

Organic Chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organic Chemistry

  2. Hydrocarbons • Contain only carbon and hydrogen • Carbon (4 valence e-) will ALWAYS form four bonds

  3. Alkanes • Only single covalent bonds • C1-C4—gases at room temp. • C5-C10—liquids at room temp. • C11 and up—solids at room temp. • Nonpolar molecules, do not mix with water.

  4. Alkanes • CnH2n+2 is the formula for all alkanes • Structural— • Condensed— • Molecular--

  5. Naming Alkanes • Find the longest “parent chain” in the molecule and name it. • Name any branches using the correct prefix and the ending “-yl” • Assign a number for the location on the parent chain where the branch is located.

  6. Isomers • Structural isomers have the same molecular formula, but different structures. • Since they are built differently, they have different properties and react differently with other compounds.

  7. Isomers • Build a model of C4H10

  8. Isomers • Build a model of C4H10 • Does it look like this?

  9. Isomers • There is another form of C4H10

  10. And it looks like this:

  11. Same molecular formula (C3H8), but completely different construction. That’s isomers.

  12. Isomers • How many isomers are there for pentane? • How many are there for hexane? • Draw and name as many octane isomers as you can (as a group) before the end of class. (1 pt. each) • Do the isomers page for homework.

  13. Alkenes and Alkynes • Contain double (-ene) or triple (-yne) bonds. • Called unsaturated compounds. • How do we name them?

  14. Functional Groups • This is a specific arrangement of atoms attached to an organic compound. • The method we’ll use to introduce them will have the molecule represented as ‘R’ and the functional group attached.

  15. Halocarbons • This is a hydrocarbon with a halogen attached to it. R-Cl or R-Br • How do you name them?

  16. Alcohols • This is a hydrocarbon with a hydroxyl attached to it. R-OH • The carbon with the hydroxyl is numbered first, before any other attachment. • How do we name them?

  17. Ethers • This is a hydrocarbon that has an oxygen along the chain. R-O-R’ • How do we name them? • Unfortunately, there are two systems for naming ethers:

  18. Aldehydes & Ketones • They have a carbonyl group attached to them. -C=O • A ketone has the carbonyl along the middle of the chain, and an aldehyde has the carbonyl at the end of the chain. • How do we name them?

  19. Carboxylic Acids • Have a carboxyl group attached to them. • These acids donate hydrogen ions just like any other acid. • The carbon with the carboxyl attached to it is automatically carbon # 1. • How do we name acids?

  20. Esters • Product of a carboxylic acid and an alcohol • Often used as artificial flavors and fragrances.

  21. Amines and Amides • Contain the functional group –NH2 • Amines have the NH2 anywhere along the chain. • Amides have the NH2 at the end of the chain, attached to a carbonyl group. • And for the last time, how do we name them?

  22. Benzene

  23. Some benzene compounds

  24. Drug Compounds Ephedrine methamphetamine

  25. Caffeine

  26. Steroids

  27. Steroid Basis

  28. Andro

  29. Some others… • andriol

  30. Some others… dianabol

  31. Polymers • Large molecules formed by the repeated bonding of smaller molecules. • For example, polyethylene is formed by repeating ethene molecules; sometimes thousands of them. • Everything we know as plastic is some kind of polymer.

  32. Fatty Acids or Fats • Fats are carboxylic acids. • An acid with only single bonds along the chain is a saturated fat. • An acid with double bonds along the chain is an unsaturated fat.

  33. Fatty Acids • The double bond comes in two types, cis- and trans-. • The trans- bond keeps the chain straight, and the cis- bonds makes the chain bend.

  34. Omega 3 Fatty Acids

  35. Table of Fatty Acids

  36. Polymers • All of these polymers that make plastics and fabrics are made of molecules that were distilled from crude oil.

  37. Where a standard barrel of crude oil goes: • 47% Gasoline • 23% Heating oil & Diesel fuel • 18% Plastics, synthetic rubber, chemicals • 10% Jet fuel • 4% Propane • 3% Asphalt • If we quit driving cars today, we would still need oil for lots of things.

More Related