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Organic Chemistry

Organic Chemistry. The study of carbon-containing compounds and their properties. The vast majority of organic compounds contain chains or rings of carbon atoms.  Bonds. Hydrocarbons. . . . compounds composed of carbon and hydrogen.

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Organic Chemistry

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  1. Organic Chemistry • The study of carbon-containing compounds and their properties. • The vast majority of organic compounds contain chains or rings of carbon atoms.

  2.  Bonds

  3. Hydrocarbons • . . . compounds composed of carbon and hydrogen. • Saturated: carbon-carbon bonds are all single - alkanes [CnH2n+2]

  4. Hydrocarbons(continued) • Unsaturated: contains carbon-carbon multiple bonds.

  5. Types of Hydrocarbons

  6. Types of Hydrocarbons

  7. Rules for Naming Alkanes • 1. For alkanes beyond butane, add -ane to the Greek root for the number of carbons. • C-C-C-C-C-C = hexane • 2. Alkyl substituents: drop the -ane and add -yl. • -C2H5 is ethyl

  8. Rules for Naming Alkanes • 3. Positions of substituent groups are specified by numbering the longest chain sequentially. • C  C-C-C-C-C-C • 3-methylhexane • 4. Location and name are followed by root alkane name. Substituents in alphabetical order and use di-, tri-, etc.

  9. Alkanes

  10. Hydrocarbons

  11. Cyclic Alkanes • Carbon atoms can form rings containing only carbon-carbon single bonds. • C3H6, C4H8, C6H12

  12. Alkenes and Alkynes • Alkenes: hydrocarbons that contain a carbon-carbon double bond. [CnH2n] • CC=C propene • Alkynes: hydrocarbons containing a carbon-carbon triple bond. • CCCCC2-pentyne

  13. Nomenclature for Alkenes • 1. Root hydrocarbon name ends in -ene • C2H4 is ethene • 2. With more than 3 carbons, double bond is indicated by the lowest numbered carbon atom in the bond. • C=CCC is 1-butene

  14. Aromatic Compounds

  15. Refinery Processes • Cracking: large molecules broken down to smaller ones by breaking carbon-carbon bonds. • Pyrolysis (thermal cracking): The process that produces cracking at high temperatures. • Catalytic Cracking: Cracking at lower temperatures. • Catalytic reforming: Alkanes and cycloalkanes converted to aromatic compounds.

  16. Reactions and Functional Groups • A special class of cyclic unsaturated hydrocarbons. + Cl2 + HCl benzene Chlorobenzene

  17. The Common Functional Groups • ClassGeneral Formula • Halohydrocarbons RX • Alcohols ROH • Ethers ROR • Aldehydes

  18. The Common Functional Groups • ClassGeneral Formula • Ketones • Carboxylic Acids • Esters • Amines RNH2

  19. Functional Groups

  20. Functional Groups

  21. Naming

  22. Naming

  23. Naming

  24. Naming

  25. Naming

  26. Naming

  27. Polymers • . . . are large, usually chainlike molecules that are built from small molecules called monomers. • MonomerPolymer • Ethylene Polyethylene • Vinyl chloride Polyvinyl chloride • Tetrafluoroethylene Teflon

  28. Types of Polymerization • Addition Polymerization: monomers “add together” to form the polymer, with no other products. (Teflon) • Condensation Polymerization: A small molecule, such as water, is formed for each extension of the polymer chain. (Nylon)

  29. Enantiomers

  30. END

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