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Ch 25 Hydrocarbon Compounds

Ch 25 Hydrocarbon Compounds. Carbon. Make a list of everything you know of that contains carbon:. Ch 25.1 Hydrocarbons. Organic Chemistry Straight Chain Alkanes Branched Chain Alkanes Properties of Alkanes. Organic Chemistry. Chemistry of all carbon compounds Over 1 million compounds

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Ch 25 Hydrocarbon Compounds

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  1. Ch 25 Hydrocarbon Compounds

  2. Carbon • Make a list of everything you know of that contains carbon:

  3. Ch 25.1 Hydrocarbons • Organic Chemistry • Straight Chain Alkanes • Branched Chain Alkanes • Properties of Alkanes

  4. Organic Chemistry • Chemistry of all carbon compounds • Over 1 million compounds • Hydrocarbons – organic compounds with only carbon and hydrogen • Alkanes – simplest hydrocarbons

  5. Methane

  6. Methane • CH4 • Carbon always forms 4 covalent bonds

  7. Straight Chain Alkanes • A number of carbon atoms, one after another • Ethane

  8. Reference Table • Table Q – Types of Hydrocarbons • Table P - Prefixes

  9. Branched Alkanes • Substituent – atom or group of atoms that takes the place of as hydrogen atom • An alkane with one or more branched groups

  10. Ch 25.2 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons • Alkenes • Alkynes

  11. Alkenes • Hydrocarbons containing carbon to carbon double bonds

  12. Saturated vs. Unsaturated • Saturated – organic compound in which all carbon atoms are joined by single covalent bonds, contains the maximum number of hydrogen compounds • Unsaturated – organic compound with one or more double or triple carbon-carbon bonds

  13. Alkynes • Hydrocarbon containing carbon to carbon triple bonds

  14. Ch 25.3 Isomerism • Isomer – same molecular formula, different structural formula

  15. Chapter 25.4 Hydrocarbon Rings • Cyclic Hydrocarbons • Aromatic Hydrocarbons

  16. Cyclic Hydrocarbons • Compounds where the end carbon of the chain are attached to each other forming a ring • Aliphatic Compounds – hydrocarbon that are chains, not rings

  17. Aromatic Hydrocarbons • Arenes – unsaturated cyclic hydrocarbons, contain single rings or groups of rings • Aromatic Compound – any substance in which the bonding is like benzene

  18. Benzene • C6H6

  19. Chapter 25.5 Hydrocarbons from Earth • Natural Gas • Petroleum • Coal

  20. The graph below shows the relationship between boiling point and molar mass at standard pressure for pentane, hexane, heptane, and nonane. • Octane has a molar mass of 114 grams per mole. According to this graph, what is the boiling point of octane at standard pressure? • State the relationship between molar mass and the strength of intermolecular forces for the selected alkanes.

  21. Allow 1 credit for 124°C ± 2°C. • Allow 1 credit. Acceptable responses include, but are not limited to: • As molar mass increases, there are stronger intermolecular forces. • The forces are greater between heavier molecules.

  22. The compound 1,2-ethanediol can be mixed with water. This mixture is added to automobile radiators as an engine coolant. The cooling system of a small van contains 6690 grams of 1,2-ethanediol. Some properties of water and 1,2-ethanediol are given in the table below. • Identify the class of organic compounds to which 1,2-ethanediol belongs. • State, in terms of molecular polarity, why 1,2-ethanediol is soluble in water. • In the space in your answer booklet, calculate the total number of moles of 1, 2-ethanediol in the small van’s cooling system. Your response must include both a correct numerical setup and the calculated result.

  23. Allow 1 credit. Acceptable responses include, but are not limited to: alcohol • Acceptable responses include, but are not limited to: • Water and 1,2-ethanediol molecules are both polar. • Both molecules have similar polarity. • • Allow 1 credit for a correct numerical setup. Acceptable responses include, but are not limited to: • • Allow 1 credit for 108 mol or for a response consistent with the student’s numerical setup.

  24. A gasoline engine burns gasoline in the presence of excess oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water. The main components of gasoline are isomers of octane. A structural formula of octane is shown below. • One isomer of octane is 2,2,4-trimethylpentane. • In the space in your answer booklet, draw a structural formula for 2,2,4-trimethylpentane. [1] • Explain, in terms of the arrangement of particles, why the entropy of gasoline vapor is greater than the entropy of liquid gasoline.

  25. The arrangement of molecules in the vapor state are more random or disordered. • Particles in the vapor state are farther apart and move more freely.

  26. Chapter 26 Functional Groups • Halide (Halocarbons) • Alcohols • Ethers • Aldehydes • Ketones • Carboxylic Acids • Esters

  27. Halide (Halocarbons) • Organic compounds covalently bonded with fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine • Naming: number – halide prefix – name • 1- Chlorohexane • R – X (X = any halogen)

  28. Alcohols • Organic compounds with an –OH group • - OH group = Hydroxyl group • Naming: number – name – ol ending • 2 - butanol

  29. Primary, Secondary, Tertiary Alcohols • Primary Alcohol – only 1 carbon attached to the primary C – OH • R – CH2 – OH • Secondary Alcohol – 2 carbons attached to the primary C – OH • R – CH – OH R • Tertiary Alcohol – 3 carbons attached to the primary C – OH R • R – C – OH R

  30. Ethers • Organic compound in which oxygen is bonded to two carbon groups • R – O –R • Naming: name each group on each side of the oxygen, then use alphabetical order and ends with ether • CH3CH2OCH3 • Ethyl methyl ether

  31. Aldehydes • Organic compound in which the carbon of the carbonyl group is bonded with at least one hydrogen • R-CH-O • Naming: name the longest chain, drop the e ending, add al • H – C = O H • Methanal

  32. Ketones • Organic compound in which the carbon of the carbonyl group is bonded to two other carbons • R – C =O R • Naming: Naming: name the longest chain, drop the e ending, add one

  33. Carboxylic Acids • Organic compound with a carboxyl group • R – C =O OH • Naming: Drop the e add oic acid • RCOOH

  34. Esters • Carboxylic acid with the OH replaced by an OR • R – C = O O – R • Naming: drop the e, add oate

  35. Dehydration Synthesis • The linking of two organic compounds by removing water from functional groups.

  36. Etherification • a) requires 2 alcohols • b) H2SO4 is the dehydrating agent. It removes H from one alcohol molecule and OH from the other to form H2O.

  37. Esterification • a) requires an alcohol and a carboxylic acid • b) forms an ester, named for the alcohol and acid that formed it.

  38. Fermentation • Fermentation of glucose or fructose in corn, barley, grapes, apples, etc. forms ethanol: • The reaction proceeds until the alcohol content reaches 13%, at which point the yeast dies. Further increases in concentration may be yielded by distillation. Used in alcoholic beverages where, in the synthesis of acetic acid (by catalytic oxidation) and it is used as a solvent.

  39. Saponification • The production of soap. • a) Requires a glycerol ester (fat) and sodium hydroxide (strong base) • b) The glycerol ester is dissolved in ethanol, and the NaOH is mixed in. • c) The mixture is heated slowly until it thickens. • d) The alcohol solvent is now evaporated off. • e) The resultant mixture is glycerol plus the sodium salts of the long-chain acids. The salts represents the soap. • f) The salts may be precipitated out of the glycerol by adding NaCl and filtering out the glycerol. The resulting lump is soap.

  40. Polymerization POLYMER - an extremely large molecule made by connecting many smaller molecules together. The basic molecules used as "building blocks" of the polymer are called monomers. • Monomer molecule = A • polymerization • 18 A -> A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A • Can be abbreviated as 18 A -(-A-)-18, which represents a chain of A monomers 18 units long.

  41. Types of Polymers: • 1) Addition Polymers - formed by addition polymerization reaction: the monomer’s double bond opens, allowing • the monomer units to join end to end. The name of the polymer is found by putting a “poly” in front of the monomer’s • name. For example, propylene monomer forms polypropylene.

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