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Explore the basics of Organic Chemistry, including the definition, vitalism, organic compound features, and bonding in carbon-containing molecules. Learn about intermolecular forces and properties of organic compounds, such as flammability, charring, solubility, and electrical conductivity. Understand the distinctions between organic and inorganic compounds through various experiments in this Chem.121 laboratory session.
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Properties of Organic and Inorganic Compounds Experiment 1 Chem 121 Organic Chemistry Laboratory
Introduction • Vital force – ‘vitalism’ • Friedrich Wohler overthrew vitalism • Synthesis of urea from ammonium cyanate • Distinguishing feature: organic compounds all contain the CARBON atom
What is ORGANIC chemistry? • the study of carbon containing compounds • Other elements in organic compounds: H, O, N, S, P, Cl, Br, I and other transition metals • Why Carbon? • Can share four valence electrons • Form strong covalent bonds • Form rings and long chains, e.g. benzene and DNA
Definition of terms • Ionic compounds: compounds made up of a metal cation and a nonmetal anion • e.g. NaCl, KNO3 • Intramolecular forces of attraction: forces existing within molecules that holds the atoms together • e.g. Ionic bond, covalent bond, metallic bond • Intermolecular forces of attraction: forces existing between molecules
Intermolecular Forces of Attraction • Ion-dipole • Between an ionic compound and a polar compound • e.g. NaCl dissolved in water • Dipole-dipole • Between two polar compounds • e.g. HCl dissolved in water
Hydrogen Bonding • Requirement: H atoms bonded to F, O, N • Strongest intermolecular force • e.g. NH3 in H2O • London dispersion forces/van der Waals forces • Between two NONPOLAR compounds • Weakest intermolecular force; present in all organic molecules
The larger the size of the organic compound, the larger the London dispersion forces.
Properties of Organic Compounds • Flammable • Due to the C-C bond energies in organic compounds • Energy released is in the form of heat • Ethanol vs. Water • Ethanol – produces the distinct blue flame • Water – smothers flame instead of generating one
Charring • also known as burning, scorching • organic compounds are sensitive to heat • End result of charring: elemental C • Sucrose • disaccharide • common ingredient in sweet foods like ice cream, candy • also works as a food preservative
IMF of sucrose: London dispersion force • IMF of NaCl and CaCO3: no intermolecular force, but intramolecular (IONIC BOND) • Remember always: Intramolecular forces are way STRONGER than intermolecular forces.
Solubility • relies on the intermolecular forces of organic compounds • ‘like dissolves like’ • Polar solvents dissolve in polar solutes. • Nonpolar solvents dissolve in nonpolar solutes. • Organic compounds = mostly nonpolar • It only follows that most organic compounds are soluble in organic solvents.
Naphthalene in ether • No ionic bonds, just pure London dispersion forces • Naphthalene in water • Water is capable of hydrogen bonding; naphthalene cannot
Electrical Conductivity • Electrical conductivity is only possible when a compound contains charged particles (i.e. an electrolyte) • e.g. NaCl, NaNO3 are electrolytes • Since most organic compounds are molecular, not ionic, it does not conduct electricity.
1 M NaCl • hexane • 1 M sucrose • 1 M ethanol
Summary • Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds. • Organic compounds have the ff properties: • Flammable • Combustible • Immiscble in polar solvents like water • Non-electrolytes; do not conduct electricity