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Chapter 15 Organic Chemistry. “Organic chemistry …is enough to drive one mad. It gives me the impression of a primeval forest, full of the most remarkable.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 15 Organic Chemistry. “Organic chemistry …is enough to drive one mad. It gives me the impression of a primeval forest, full of the most remarkable."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 15 Organic Chemistry

2 “Organic chemistry …is enough to drive one mad. It gives me the impression of a primeval forest, full of the most remarkable things, a monstrous and boundless thicket, with no way of escape, into which one may well dread to enter.” -Friedrich Wöhler

3 Which of these are “organic”? CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 OH NaCN CH 3 COOH CH 3 (CH 2 ) 16 COOH HC  CH CaCO 3 CH 3 CH=CH 2 What is special about carbon?

4 Carbon 1. Electron configuration, electonegativity, and covalent bonding 2. Bond properties, catenation, and molecular shape 3. Molecular stability

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7 Hydrocarbons “Aliphatic” Alkanes Alkenes Alkynes “Aromatic” C H H HHC H H C H C H H H CC HH

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9 Single, double, and triple bonds CHH H H CH H CH H CHCH CH 4 C2H4C2H4 C2H2C2H2

10 Alkanes, C n H 2n+2 “Saturated” C 9 H 20

11 Single Bonds - sp 3 (tetrahedral) 109.5°

12 Staggered Conformations

13 Single bonds - unrestricted rotation

14 Structures & Rotation Ethane C 2 H 6 CH 3 Staggered Eclipsed

15 Conformations Different spatial arrangements generated by rotation around a single bond

16 Constitutional (structural) isomers

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18 Naming 1.Longest C-C chain:root name 2.Suffix:compound type 3.Prefix for rings: “cyclo” 4.Branches:root + “yl” alphabeticalnumbered

19 Alkane examples © Mc-Graw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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21 Physical Properties Straight:lower melting points, higher boiling points Branched:higher melting points, lower boiling points

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23 Ring strain - cyclopropane

24 Conformations of cyclohexane

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26 Enantiomers

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30 Alkenes, C n H 2n - sp 2 “Unsaturated”

31 Geometric Isomers

32 Light energy temporarily excites  bond electrons Bond breaks - allows rotation

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34 Alkynes, C n H 2n-2 - sp “Unsaturated”

35 Aromatic - Benzene derivatives Delocalized (conjugated)  electron cloud

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38 Free-Radical Substitution Reactions Alkanes:

39 Functional Groups - Reactive Sites

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41 Important Reactions 1 - Substitution C bonded to same number of atoms | R— C — X | :Y:Y R— C — Y | :X:X

42 Important Reactions 2 - Addition Two  bonds from one  bond and one  bond R— C — C — RX—Y X Y | | R— C — C — R | |

43 Important Reactions 3 - Elimination Elimination of small, stable molecule + entropy R— C — C — RX—Y X Y | | R— C — C — R | |

44 Oxidation-reduction Oxidation: – More bonds to O – Less bonds to H Reduction: – Less bonds to O – More bonds to H O R— C H | R— C — OH | O R— C OH | R— C —H |

45 Functional Groups with Single Bonds Alcohols & Ethers HaloalkanesAmines R—O —H  R—X: X = halogen  R— N — |  R—O —R 

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47 Alcohol Reactions Elimination – Elimination of H 2 O in acid Dehydration to C=C – Elimination of 2 H w/ strong ox.agent Oxidation to C=O Substitution – Single bonded products – “Reactive” C bonded to electronegative atom

48 Haloalkane Reactions Elimination of HX in very strong base C=C product Substitution in base – Single bonded products —OH, —OR, —CN, —SH, —NH 2, … – “Reactive” C bonded to electronegative atom

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51 Amine Reactions Substitution – Single bonded products – Lone pair on N attacks  + on another molecule | 2R— C — NH 2 | R’—C H 2 — Y  | R— C — NHR’ | | + R— C — NH 3 Cl |

52 Functional Groups with Double Bonds AlkenesAldehydesKetones Carboxylic Acids     e - rich R— C — C — R O R— C H O R— C OH  e - rich

53 Alkenes Addition reactions R— C — C — RH3O+H3O+ OH H | | R— C — C — R | | R— C — C — RHX X H | | R— C — C — R | |

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55 Aromatic - Substitution Reactions Delocalized  electrons stabilize ring

56 Charge Distribution & Reactivity Can undergo substitution or oxidation-reduction

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58 Oxidation of aldehydes to acids

59 Substitution Z—Y O—Z | R— C — OH | Y O R— C OH O R— C Y Z—OH 1. Addition 2. Elimination

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61 Substitution dehydration

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63 Substitution of —OH by N in amines

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65 Functional Groups with Triple Bonds AlkynesNitriles  e - rich R— C — C — R R— C — N: e - rich Reactions:addition Formation increases C chain by 1 Reactions:subsitution/hydrolysis, reduction, …

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68 Types of polymers 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)

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71 Biological Polymers Carbohydrates, saccharides, polysaccharides Amino acids, peptides, proteins Fatty acids, lipids, fats, oils, waxes, steroids, phospholipids Nucleotides, nucleic acids

72 Saccharides/Carbohydrates

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74 C C C C C CH 2 OH OH HO OH OH H H H H C C C C C CH 2 OH O OH HO OH H H H H H C C C C C CH 2 OH O OH HO OH H H H H H O H H H H H CH 2 OH OH O H H H H H CH 2 OH OH D-glucose  -D-glucopyranose  -D-glucopyranose

75 O H H H H H OH CH 2 OH OH O H H H H H CH 2 OH O O H H H H H OH CH 2 OH OH O H H H H H CH 2 OH O  -1-4-glycosidic bond  -1-4-glycosidic bond Glycosidic linkages (dehydration)

76 Disaccharides

77 Polysaccharides AmyloseAmylopectinStarchGlycogenCellulose

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80 Amino acids H H | O N—C—C H | OH R  Amine  Acid  -carbon

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82 Amide Linkage (“peptide bond”) H O H H H | || | | O N—C— C — N — C — C +H 2 O H | | OH R  R’ peptide bond (dehydration)

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84 Levels of Structure 1

85 Levels of Structure 2

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87 Levels of Structure 3

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