Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Topic 27.
Advertisements

Chapter 17: Organic Chemistry
Section 20.1 Saturated Hydrocarbons 1.To understand the types of bonds formed by the carbon atom 2.To learn about the alkanes 3.To learn about structural.
1.
Organic and Biological Chemistry Chapter 25 Organic and Biological Chemistry Chemistry, The Central Science, 10th edition Theodore L. Brown; H. Eugene.
Chapter 25 Organic and Biological Chemistry. Organic Chemistry The chemistry of carbon compounds. Carbon has the ability to form long chains. Without.
Organic Chemistry = Chemistry of carbon compounds = chemistry of living things.
Introduction to Organic Molecules & Functional Groups
Chapter 12 Organic Chemistry: The Infinite Variety of Carbon Compounds
Organic Functional Groups
Done by Lecturer: Amal Abu- Mostafa.  Refinery and tank storage facilities, like this one in Texas, are needed to change the hydrocarbons of crude oil.
Chapter 22. Organic Compounds All organic compounds contain CARBON. However, not all carbon-containing compounds are classified as organic. Examples:
Organic Compound Nomenclature
Functional Groups.
UNIT 3 – ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. OBJECTIVES What does Organic mean? Is “organic” always good? (or better?)
Organic Chemistry Larry Scheffler Lincoln High School 1 Revised September 12, 2010.
L. Scheffler IB Chemistry 3-4. Lincoln H.S.
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups, Intermolecular Forces and Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy.
Families of Carbon Compounds
CHE 311 Organic Chemistry I Dr. Jerome K. Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University.
Chapter 3 Drawing Chemical Structures And Classification of Organic Chemistry 2.1 Drawing Chemical Structures 2.2 Classification of Organic Chemistry.
Review and Introduction to Organic Chemistry 1. Where are electrons? Atomic structure Atomic number Atomic weight Energy levels Electron configurations.
Christopher G. Hamaker, Illinois State University, Normal IL
Lecture Notes Alan D. Earhart Southeast Community College Lincoln, NE Chapter 23 Organic Chemistry John E. McMurry Robert C. Fay CHEMISTRY Fifth Edition.
Chapter 22: Hydrocarbon Compounds
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY AP CHEMISTRY. © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Organic Chemistry Organic chemistry is the chemistry of carbon compounds. Carbon has the ability.
Chapter 1 Organic Chemistry Chemistry 20. Organic Compounds.
Aim: How are carbon compounds named and drawn? Organic compounds contain carbon atoms, which bond to one another in chains, rings, and networks to form.
Structure and Functional Groups, Intermolecular Forces and Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy.
Organic Chemistry.
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups, Intermolecular Forces and Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy.
Unit 13- Organic Chemistry
CHAPTER 23 ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. The Nature of Organic Molecules Carbon is tetravalent. It has four outer-shell electrons (1s 2 2s 2 2p 2 ) and forms four.
Chapter 1 Introduction to Organic Chemistry: 1.1 Organic Compounds 1.
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups, Intermolecular Forces and Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy.
Chapter 11 Introduction to Organic Chemistry: Alkanes
Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry, Eleventh Edition Copyright © 2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 10 Introduction.
Chapter 21  Functional Groups  Functional group families are characterized by the presence of a certain arrangement of atoms called a functional group.
Ch 22: Organic Chemistry.
Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups Chapter 2.
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY The scientific study of the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation (by synthesis or by other means) of chemical.
Chapter 1-Continue Introduction to Organic Chemistry.
Organic Chemistry Saturated Hydrocarbons Petroleum Reactions of Alkanes Unsaturated Hydrocarbons Aromatic Hydrocarbons Alcohols Aldehydes and Ketones Carboxylic.
Chapter 12 Organic and Biological Chemistry. Organic Chemistry The chemistry of carbon compounds. Carbon has the ability to form long chains. Without.
Organic Chemistry Review Part II. Functional Groups 1. Hydrocarbons 2. Derivatives of Hydrocarbons.
Goals for the Day: Combustion Reactions of Alkanes Functional Groups Naming Alkenes & Alkynes Physical Properties of Alkenes & Alkynes Reactions of Alkenes.
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups, Intermolecular Forces and Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy.
INTRODUCTORY CHEMISTRY INTRODUCTORY CHEMISTRY Concepts and Critical Thinking Sixth Edition by Charles H. Corwin 1 Chapter 19 © 2011 Pearson Education,
Christopher G. Hamaker, Illinois State University, Normal IL © 2008, Prentice Hall Chapter 19 Organic Chemistry INTRODUCTORY CHEMISTRY INTRODUCTORY CHEMISTRY.
Organic compounds Contain Elements C (Four covalent bonds) H (One covalent bond) Halogen (One covalent bond) O (Two covalent bonds) S (Two covalent bonds)
TOPIC 11 REVIEW BOOK TABLES P, Q AND R Organic Chemistry.
Chapter 2 Families of Carbon Compounds. Basic Definitions Hydrocarbons- Compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen. Alkanes- hydrocarbons that contain.
Basic Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry The study of the structure, reaction, and synthesis of compounds that consist mostly of carbon and hydrogen Organic compounds can contain.
Organic Chemistry = the study of carbon and most carbon compounds.
Organic Chemistry Introduction Functional Groups Names and Structures
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups
Organic Chemistry Introduction Functional Groups Alkanes Alkenes
Functional Groups Unit 2.
Functional Groups In an organic molecule, a functional group is an atom or group of atoms that always reacts in a certain way. Section 22-1.
Chapter 24 Organic Chemistry
Functional Groups Unit 3.
Organic compounds contain carbon..excluding carbonates and oxides
Functional Groups.
Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups
Organic Chemistry = the study of carbon and most carbon compounds.
Organic Chemistry = ______________________ ________________________.
Aim: How are carbon compounds named and drawn?
Organic Chemistry PrductiveStudent.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 2 Representative Carbon Compounds: Functional Groups

Chapter 22  Carbon-carbon Covalent Bonds Carbon forms strong covalent bonds to other carbons and to other elements such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur  This accounts for the vast variety of organic compounds possible Organic compounds are grouped into functional group families  A functional group is a specific grouping of atoms (e.g. carbon- carbon double bonds are in the family of alkenes)  An instrumental technique called infrared (IR) spectroscopy is used to determine the presence of specific functional groups

Chapter 23  Hydrocarbons: Representative Alkanes, Alkenes Alkynes, and Aromatic Compounds  Hydrocarbons contain only carbon and hydrogen atoms  Subgroups of Hydrocarbons:  Alkanes contain only carbon-carbon single bonds  Alkenes contain one or more carbon-carbon double bonds  Alkynes contain one or more carbon-carbon triple bonds  Aromatic hydrocarbons contain benzene-like stable structures (discussed later)  Saturated hydrocarbons: contain only carbon-carbon single bonds e.g. alkanes  Unsaturated hydrocarbons: contain double or triple carbon- carbon bonds e.g. alkene, alkynes, aromatics  Contain fewer than maximum number of hydrogens per carbon  Capable of reacting with H 2 to become saturated

Chapter 24  Representative Hydrocarbons Alkanes  Principle sources of alkanes are natural gas and petroleum  Smaller alkanes (C 1 to C 4 ) are gases at room temperature  Methane is  A component of the atmosphere of many planets  Major component of natural gas  Produced by primitive organisms called methanogens found in mud, sewage and cows’ stomachs

Chapter 25 Alkenes  Ethene (ethylene) is a major industrial feedstock  Used in the production of ethanol, ethylene oxide and the polymer polyethylene  Propene (propylene) is also very important in industry  Molecular formula C 3 H 6  Used to make the polymer polypropylene and is the starting material for acetone  Many alkenes occur naturally

Chapter 26 Alkynes  Ethyne (acetylene) is used in welding torches because it burns at high temperature  Many alkynes are of biological interest  Capillin is an antifungal agent found naturally  Dactylyne is a marine natural product  Ethinyl estradiol is a synthetic estrogen used in oral contraceptives

Chapter 27 Benzene: A Representative Hydrocarbon  Benzene is the prototypical aromatic compound  The Kekulé structure (named after August Kekulé who formulated it) is a six- membered ring with alternating double and single bonds  Benzene does not actually have discreet single and double carbon-carbon bonds  All carbon-carbon bonds are exactly equal in length (1.38 Å)  This is between the length of a carbon-carbon single bond and a carbon-carbon double bond  Resonance theory explains this by suggesting there are two resonance hybrids that contribute equally to the real structure  The real structure is often depicted as a hexagon with a circle in the middle

Chapter 28 Molecular orbital theory explains the equal bond lengths of benzene by suggesting there in a continuous overlap of p orbitals over the entire ring  All carbons in benzene are sp 2 hybridized  Each carbon also has a p orbital  Each p orbital does not just overlap with one adjacent p but overlaps with p orbitals on either side to give a continuous bonding molecular orbital that encompasses all 6 carbons  All 6  electrons are therefore delocalized over the entire ring and this results in the equivalence of all of the carbon-carbon bonds

Chapter 29  Polar Covalent Bonds Polar covalent bonds occur when a covalent bond is formed between two atoms of differing electronegativities  The more electronegative atom draws electron density closer to itself  The more electronegative atom develops a partial negative charge (  -) and the less electronegative atom develops a partial positive charge (  +)  A bond which is polarized is a dipole and has a dipole moment  The direction of the dipole can be indicated by a dipole arrow  The arrow head is the negative end of a dipole, the crossed end is the positive end

Chapter 210 Example: the molecule HCl  The more electronegative chlorine draws electron density away from the hydrogen  Chlorine develops a partial negative charge

Chapter 211  Functional Groups  Functional group families are characterized by the presence of a certain arrangement of atoms called a functional group  A functional group is the site of most chemical reactivity of a molecule  The functional group is responsible for many of the physical properties of a molecule  Alkanes do not have a functional groups  Carbon-carbon single bonds and carbon-hydrogen bonds are generally very unreactive

Chapter 212 Alkyl Groups and the Symbol R  Alkyl groups are obtained by removing a hydrogen from an alkane  Often more than one alkyl group can be obtained from an alkane by removal of different kinds of hydrogens  R is the symbol to represent a generic alkyl groups  The general formula for an alkane can be abbreviated R-H

Chapter 213  A benzene ring with a hydrogen removed is called a phenyl and can be represented in various ways  Toluene (methylbenzene) with its methyl hydrogen removed is called a benzyl group

Chapter 214 Alkyl Halides  In alkyl halides, halogen (F, Cl, Br, I) replaces the hydrogen of an alkane  They are classified based on the carbon the halogen is attached to  If the carbon is attached to one other carbon that carbon is primary (1 o ) and the alkyl halide is also 1 o  If the carbon is attached to two other carbons, that carbon is secondary (2 o ) and the alkyl halide is 2 o  If the carbon is attached to three other carbons, the carbon is tertiary (3 o ) and the alkyl halide is 3 o

Chapter 215 Alcohols  In alcohols the hydrogen of the alkane is replaced by the hydroxyl (-OH) group  An alcohol can be viewed as either a hydroxyl derivative of an alkane or an alkyl derivative of water  Alcohols are also classified according to the carbon the hydroxyl is directly attached to

Chapter 216 Ethers  Ethers have the general formula R-O-R or R-O-R’ where R’ is different from R  These can be considered organic derivatives of water in which both hydrogens are replaced by organic groups  The bond angle at oxygen is close to the tetrahedral angle Amines  Amines are organic derivatives of ammonia  They are classified according to how many alkyl groups replace the hydrogens of ammonia  This is a different classification scheme than that used in alcohols

Chapter 217 Aldehydes and Ketones  Both contain the carbonyl group  Aldehydes have at least one carbon attached to the carbonyl group  Ketones have two organic groups attached to the carbonyl group  The carbonyl carbon is sp 2 hybridized  It is trigonal planar and has bond angle about 120 o

Chapter 218 Carboxylic Acids, Esters and Amides  All these groups contain a carbonyl group bonded to an oxygen or nitrogen  Carboxylic Acids  Contain the carboxyl (carbonyl + hydroxyl) group  Esters  A carbonyl group is bonded to an alkoxyl (OR’) group

Chapter 219  Amide  A carbonyl group is bonded to a nitrogen derived from ammonia or an amine Nitriles  An alkyl group is attached to a carbon triply bonded to a nitrogen  This functional group is called a cyano group

Chapter 220 Summary of Important Families of Organic Compounds

Chapter 221  Summary (cont.)