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Organic Chemistry and the Importance of Carbon

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Presentation on theme: "Organic Chemistry and the Importance of Carbon"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Organic Chemistry and the Importance of Carbon
The Chemistry of Life Organic Chemistry and the Importance of Carbon

3 Organic Chemistry Study of carbon-based compounds
Range from simple molecules (monomers) to large biomolecules (polymers)

4 Carbon Very unique in its ability to form large, complex, diverse molecules Has 4 valence electrons Can form up to 4 covalent bonds (tetracovalence) Bonds can be single, double, or triple covalent Molecules can be chains, ring-shaped, or branched Can create many isomers (molecules with same formula, but different atom arrangement)

5 Carbon Bonding C2H6 C2H4 C2H2

6 Molecule Shape branched linear ring

7 Carbon Bonding & Molecular Shape
Creates a tetrahedron when C has a single bond with other molecule Creates a flat molecule when C is double bonded

8 Creating Variety Hydrocarbons – molecules consisting of C and H covalently bonded Found in fat molecules Produce large quantities of energy

9 Creating Variety Both are molecules of C6H12
Have different properties because of bonding

10 Building Biological Molecules
Functional Groups – chemical groups that attach to the C skeleton that change molecular function Hydroxyl Carbonyl Carboxyl Amino Sulfhydryl Phosphate Methyl

11 Hydroxyls (-OH) Examples: Alcohols (ethanol, methanol)
Polar and hydrophilic Function: helps dissolve organic compounds (sugar)

12 Carboxyls (-COOH) Examples: carboxylic acid, acetic acid (vinegar)
Organic acids Found in fatty acids and sugars Hydrophilic and polar

13 Carbonyls (>CO) Examples: ketones, aldehydes, acetone (nail polish remover) Found in sugars Hydrophilic and polar

14 Amino (-NH2) Example: amino acids Acts like a base
Group to form proteins Hydrophilic and polar

15 Sulfhydryl (-SH) Examples: proteins in hair Found in some amino acids

16 Phosphate (-PO3) Examples: ATP, DNA, phospholipids
Has the potential to react with water to create energy Hydrophilic and polar

17 Methyl (-CH3) Example: butane
Binding to DNA changes the expression of genes Arrangement affects the shape and function of hormones Hydrophobic

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