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Unit 2b The World of Carbon

Unit 2b The World of Carbon. Carboxylic acids. contain the carboxyl group, –COOH name ends in –oic usual rules of naming i.e. longest carbon chain must include –COOH; number carbon atoms from end closest to –COOH; branches assigned smallest number possible e.g.

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Unit 2b The World of Carbon

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  1. Unit 2b The World of Carbon

  2. Carboxylic acids • contain the carboxyl group, –COOH • name ends in –oic • usual rules of naming i.e. longest carbon chain must include –COOH; • number carbon atoms from end closest to –COOH; • branches assigned smallest number possible • e.g. • Uses: ethanoic acid – pickle food (vinegar), feedstock for paints; • benzoic acid – preservative and antioxidant in food • benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid – nylon production

  3. Esters • contain the ester group, -COO- • made by a condensation reaction of an alcohol, –OH, with • an alkanoic acid –COOH giving an ester –COO- + water, H-OH • e.g. • first part of ester name from alcohol, second part from acid e.g. • pentanoic acid + butan-1-ol makes butyl pentanoate • the reverse reaction is hydrolysis • NaOH is often used for hydrolysis, rather than water

  4. Uses of esters • smelly so useful as flavourings and in perfumes • solvents, e.g. in paints • making medicines

  5. Percentage yield Percentage yield = actual yield x 100 theoretical yield

  6. Polymers • very large molecules made from small monomers • Addition polymers: • made from unsaturated monomers (usually just the 1) • alkene monomer polyalkene product (only!) • alkenes made by cracking alkanes • polymers have carbon-to-carbon backbone –C-C-C-C- • e.g.

  7. Condensation polymers: • made from monomers with 2 functional groups • (usually 2 monomers) • small molecule, usually water, made at same time • have O, and sometimes N, in backbone • polyesters, polyamides, methanal-based polymers

  8. Polyesters • ester group –COO- • 1 monomer a diol, the other a diacid • repeating unit in brackets • linear structures, used for fibres • additional functional groups in monomers allow • cross-linking between chains; used for resins

  9. Polyamides • amide group –CONH- • usually 1 monomer a diacid, the other a diamine • (protein monomers are amino acids) this polymer is nylon-6.6 as each monomer has 6 carbon atoms • hydrogen bonding between chains increases the • strength of the polymer

  10. Methanal based thermosetting polymers • methanol made from synthesis gas (CO + H2) • and oxidised to methanal • examples are urea-methanal and Bakelite • electrical insulators • thermosetting polymers cannot be remoulded

  11. Newer polymers Addition polymers Polyethyne – electrical conductor; used in high performance loudspeakers Poly(vinyl carbazole) – photoconductor; used in photocopiers Poly(ethenol) – water soluble; used in hospital laundry bags Poly(ethene) with carbonyl groups – photodegradable; used in packaging material Condensation polymers Kevlar – very strong; used in bullet-proof vests Biopol – biodegradable; high costs have stopped production

  12. Natural Products • Fats and oils • good energy source • fats from animals; oils from plants and fish • esters; hydrolysis produces 1 mole glycerol: 3 moles fatty acids • fatty acids are straight-chain carboxylic acids, C4 to C24; • can be saturated or unsaturated • oils more unsaturated, more double bonds than fats. less • densely packed molecules so fewer van der waals interactions • hence lower melting points • hydrogenation of oils produces fats (vegetable oils margarine) • hydrolysis with NaOH produces soaps

  13. Natural Products • Proteins • natural condensation polymers • polyamides ie contain many –CONH- groups • amino acid monomers e.g. • essential amino acids cannot be made by body, are obtained • through diet • digestion of proteins produces amino acids

  14. Classifying proteins – 2 types fibrous: structural materials e.g. in skin, nails, hair globular proteins: involved in regulation of life processes e.g. enzymes, hormones. haemoglobin • Enzymes • specific, only catalyse on reaction • substrate fits enzyme on ‘lock and key’ principle • can be building up reactions, as well as breaking down • denatured by high temperature, shape irreversibly changed • optimum pH for activity e.g. pH 2 or pepsin, stomach enzyme

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