1 / 38

Organic Chemistry

Learn about organic chemistry, the study of carbon compounds and their bonds. Explore the properties and reactions of over 16 million carbon-containing compounds. Understand the concepts of homologous series, isomers, and naming conventions for non-cyclic alkanes and alkenes.

carrolj
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 1234 bonds Introduction HONC Chem-100

  2. What is organic chemistry? • study of carbon, the compounds it makes, and the reactions it undergoes • over 16 million carbon-containing compounds are known • because the C-C single bond (348 kJ mol-1) and the C-H bond (412 kJ mol-1) are strong, carbon compounds are stable • carbon can form chains and rings Chem-100

  3. Homologous series/compounds (10.1.1) • related compounds that have the same functional group (groups of atoms found within molecules that are involved in the chemical reactions characteristic of those molecules) Chem-100

  4. Chem-100

  5. differ from each other by a CH2 unit • can be represented by a general formula • examples: • CnH2n+2 (alkanes) or CnH2n (alkenes) or… Chem-100

  6. Chem-100

  7. have similar chemical properties • have physical properties that vary in a regular manner as the number of carbon atoms increases • Example: the alkanes Chem-100

  8. Chem-100

  9. Trends in boiling points of members of a homologous series (10.1.2) • melting point and boiling point increase with more carbon atoms • Why? • intermolecular forces increase • adding a CH2 adds more electrons • this increases the Van der Waal’s forces Chem-100

  10. Empirical, molecular & structural formulas (10.1.3) Chem-100

  11. empirical formula • simplest ratio of atoms in a molecule • molecular formula • actual numbers of atoms in a molecule Chem-100

  12. structural formula • unambiguously shows how the atoms are bonded together • can use condensedstructural formulas • bonds are omitted, repeated groups put together, side chains put in brackets • CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 • or even CH3(CH2)4CH3 • CH3CH(CH3)CH3 Chem-100

  13. condensed Chem-100

  14. Isomers (10.1.4) • (structural) isomers: compounds with the same molecular formula but different structure (arrangement of atoms) Chem-100

  15. different isomers are completely different compounds • have different physical properties such as melting point and boiling point Chem-100

  16. Structural Formulas for C4H10O Isomers Chem-100

  17. Structural formulas for the isomers of non-cyclic alkanesup to C6(10.1.5) Alkanes • hydrocarbon chains where all the bonds between carbons are SINGLE bonds • CnH2n+2 • draw out and write the structural formulas for all isomers that can be formed by: • CH4 • C2H6 • C3H8 • C4H10 • C5H12 • C6H14 Richard Thornley 10.1.5 2:54 Chem-100

  18. Monkeys • Eat • Peeled • Bananas Naming the isomers (IUPAC) of non-cyclic alkanes up to C6(10.1.6) • Richard Thornley 3:35 • Determine the longest carbon chain • Use the prefix to denote the number carbons Chem-100

  19. use the suffix “-ane” to indicate that the substance is an alkane • number the carbons in the chain consecutively, starting at the end closest to a substituent (groups attached to the main chain/most busy end) Chem-100

  20. name and number the location of each substituent • the name of the substituent will be written before the main chain and will end with “–yl” (or just memorize the below) • CH3 is methyl • C2H5 is ethyl • C3H7 is propyl And with 2 or more side chains: • use prefixes di-, tri-, tetra-, to indicate when there are multiple side chains of the same type • use commas to separate numbers and hyphens to separate numbers or letters. • name the side chains in alphabetical order Chem-100

  21. How about C5H12? The isomers are: Pentane 2-methyl-butane 2,2-dimethyl propane Chem-100

  22. Nomenclature Practice Name this compound Step #1: For a branched hydrocarbon, the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms gives the root name for the hydrocarbon 1 9 carbons = nonane 2 4 3 5 6 7 8 9 Chem-100

  23. Nomenclature Practice Name this compound 9 carbons = nonane 1 2 4 3 5 6 CH3 = methyl 7 chlorine = chloro 8 9 Step #2: When alkane groups appear as substituents, they are named by dropping the -ane and adding -yl. Chem-100

  24. Nomenclature Practice Name this compound Step #3: The positions of substituent groups are specified by numbering the longest chain of carbon atoms sequentially, starting at the end closest to the branching. 9 carbons = nonane 1 2 4 3 5 6 CH3 = methyl 7 chlorine = chloro 8 9 1 9 NOT 9 1 Chem-100

  25. Nomenclature Practice Name this compound Step #4: The location and name of each substituent are followed by the root alkane name. The substituents are listed in alphabetical order (irrespective of any prefix), and the prefixes di-, tri-, etc. are used to indicate multiple identical substituents. 9 carbons = nonane 1 2 4 3 5 6 CH3 = methyl 7 chlorine = chloro 8 9 2-chloro-3,6-dimethylnonane Chem-100

  26. Alkenes Structural formulas for the isomers of the straight chain alkenesup to C6(10.1.7) • alkenes have a double bond between two or more of the carbons • CnH2n • draw out and write the structural formulas for all isomers that can be formed by each • C2H4 • C3H6 • C4H8 • C5H10 • C6H12 Richard Thornley 10.1.7 (1:37) Chem-100

  27. Naming the isomers (IUPAC) of straight chain alkenes up to C6(10.1.8) • suffix changes to “-ene” • when there are 4 or more carbon atoms in a chain, the location of the double bond is indicated by a number • begin counting the carbons closest to the end with the C=C bond • numbering the location of the double bond(s) takes precedence over the location of any substituents 1-butene 2-butene but-1-ene but-2-ene Chem-100

  28. Naming Practice!!! choose the correct ending ene Chem-100

  29. determine the longest carbon chain with the double bond ene Chem-100

  30. assign numbers to each carbon ene Chem-100

  31. assign numbers to each carbon ene Chem-100

  32. attach prefix (according to # of carbons) 1-hexene ene Chem-100

  33. ethyl methyl methyl determine name for side chains 1-hexene 1-hexene Chem-100

  34. ethyl methyl methyl attach name of branches alphabetically 2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene Chem-100

  35. ethyl methyl methyl group similar branches 2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene Chem-100

  36. ethyl methyl methyl group similar branches 2-ethyl-4,4-dimethyl-1-hexene or 2-ethyl-4,4-dimethyl hex-1-ene Chem-100

  37. propene 2,4-dimethyl-2-pentene 2,4-dimethyl pent-2-tene 2-butene Chem-100

  38. a) 3,3-dimethyl-1-pentene b) same C H 3 C H C C C H C H C H 3 3 C H 3 c) 4,5 dimethyl-2-hexene Chem-100

More Related