Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Functional Groups.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Functional Groups."— Presentation transcript:

1 Functional Groups

2 What are functional groups?
Remember back to alkenes and alkynes A group of bonded atoms that appear in all members of a chemical family The functional group results in similar properties for all members of the group. Ex. 2 – propanol (isopropanol) and ethanol have very similar properties due to the (-OH) hydroxyl group.

3 General Formulas General formulas for organic compounds emphasize the functional group. Why? Functional groups are most important. How? R- stands for the alkyl group(part) of the molecule If more than one type alkyl group is present we use R’ and R” to tell show that they are different

4 General Formulas Eg. The general formula for alcohols is:
R-OH, where R- represents the hydrocarbon or alkyl part Therefore, R-OH represents ALL alcohols CH3OH CH3CH2OH CH3CH2CH2OH, etc.

5 Naming Organic Compounds
According to functional group This determines properties Suffix – indicates the most important functional group Eg. Ethene = double bond Ethanol = hydroxyl group

6 Physical Properties and Forces Between Molecules

7 Physical Properties of Organic Compounds
Melting Point Boiling Point Solubility All depend on functional groups Same functional group = similar properties Why? Physical properties are determined by intermolecular forces = forces b/n molecules

8 Intermolecular Forces
3 types play a role Hydrogen bonding Dipole-dipole interactions Dispersion forces Decreasing Strength

9 Hydrogen Bonding Attraction between the H atom from an N-H, O-H or F-H group on one molecule and a N, O or F atom on another molecule. E.g. Hydrogen bonding in H2O

10 Dipole-dipole Interactions
Attractive force b/n polar molecules. Cause polar molecules to stick together. Weaker than H bonding b/c electronegativity difference is less within the covalent bond. E.g.

11 Dispersion Forces (London or Van der Waals Forces)
Weak attractive force Occurs between all covalent molecules as the size of the molecule  How are they created? Random, uneven electron distribution occurs within molecules that come close to one another. Weak attraction b/n nucleus of one molecule and electrons of the other.

12 Predicting Properties based Intermolecular Forces

13 Can the molecules form hydrogen bonds?
Must have O-H, N-H, H-F Can form H-bonds with themselves and H2O Molecules can form H-bonds with themselves = higher boiling point If they can form H-bonds with water they will usually be soluble in water.

14 Are the molecules polar?
They are if: They have polar bonds The polar bonds do not counter act each other ie. They act in opposite directions

15 Polar Molecules Are attracted to each other by dipole-dipole forces
Have lower boiling points than similar molecules with hydrogen bonding but higher than non-polar molecules. As non-polar part of a molecule gets larger  solubility decreases. Eg. CH3CH2OH is more soluble than CH3CH2CH2CH2OH

16 Relative boiling points
CH3CH2OH – ethanol (hydrogen bonds, dipole-dipole and dispersion) CH3OCH3 – methyoxymethane (dipole-dipole and dispersion) CH3CH3 – ethane (dispersion forces) Why? Molecules need more kinetic energy to break the intermolecular forces. Boiling Point

17 How strong are the dispersion forces?
Weakest of the 3 Stronger as the hydrocarbon part of the molecule gets larger Therefore longer molecules tend to have higher boiling points Eg. ethane (-89°C) hexane (69°C)


Download ppt "Functional Groups."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google