Title: Chapter 24: Organic chemistry
1Chapter 24 Organic chemistry
Chemistry 1062 Principles of Chemistry II Andy
Aspaas, Instructor
2Carbon
- Carbon central element of organic chemistry
- Organic compounds compounds containing
carbon-carbon bonds - 4 valence electrons 4 must be shared from other
atoms - 4 single bonds (tetrahedral)
- 1 double bond, 2 single bonds (trigonal planar)
- 2 double bonds (linear)
- 1 triple bond, 1 single bond (linear)
3Hydrocarbons
- Hydrocarbon molecule that contains only carbon
and hydrogen atoms - Saturated hydrocarbons only CC single bonds
- May be cyclic or acyclic
- Unsaturated hydrocarbons contain some
carbon-carbon double and/or triple bonds - Aromatic hydrocarbons contain benzene rings
- (Non-aromatic hydrocarbons are aliphatic)
4Alkanes and cycloalkanes
- Alkanes are acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
- Cycloalkanes are cyclic saturated hydrocarbons
- Molecular formula indicates only type and
quantity of atoms in a molecule - Structural formula indicates connectivity in the
molecule (which atoms are bonded to which) - Structural formulas look like Lewis structures
- Condensed structural formulas dont draw the
bonds, but still indicate connectivity
5Straight-chain alkanes
- Straight-chain alkanes (or normal alkanes) have
all carbons in a row - n- at beginning indicates straight-chain (normal)
- General formula CnH2n2
Name Molecular formula Structural formula
Methane CH4 CH4
Ethane C2H6 CH3CH3
Propane C3H8 CH3CH2CH3
n-Butane C4H10 CH3(CH2)2CH3
6Straight-chain alkanes (5 C through 10 C)
- For straight-chain alkanes 5 C through 10 C, use
Greek prefix followed by -ane
Name Molecular formula Structural formula
n-pentane C5H12 CH3(CH2)3CH3
n-hexane C6H14 CH3(CH2)4CH3
n-heptane C7H16 CH3(CH2)5CH3
n-octane C8H18 CH3(CH2)6CH3
n-nonane C9H20 CH3(CH2)7CH3
n-decane C10H22 CH3(CH2)8CH3
7Isomerism in alkanes
- n-Butane has a contsitutional isomer (same number
and kind atoms, different bonds) - Same molecular formula, different structural
formula - Isobutane branched, all carbons not in a row
- CH3(CH3)CHCH3 (parentheses mean group is not in
the main chain)
8Branched alkanes
- More complex branched alkanes require different
naming rules - Any of the straight-chain alkanes can be made
into substitutents - or branches off a main
chain - Methane becomes methyl as a branch (CH3)
- Ethane becomes ethyl as a branch (CH2CH3), etc
9Naming complex branched alkanes
- Start by identifying the longest carbon chain
- Identify branches off the longest chain as their
substituent name (methyl, ethyl, propyl, etc) - Number longest chain starting at end closest to
the first branch - Name the compound, starting with branches and
indicating the number on the main chain to which
the branch is attached
10Cycloalkanes
- Saturated hydrocarbons which form a ring of
carbon atoms - General formula CnH2n
- Prefix name with cyclo- and name as if straight
chain - E.g. cyclobutane (4 carbons) cyclohexane (6
carbons) - Any organic molecule can be drawn as a line-angle
formula, where carbons and hydrogens are not
explicitly shown. - Line-angle drawing of cyclohexane is simply a
hexagon - Practice drawing!
11Alkenes and alkynes
- Alkenes and alkynes unsaturated hydrocarbons
- Typically more reactive than alkanes (reactions
can occur at carbon-carbon double and triple
bonds) - Hydrogenation addition of two hydrogen atoms
across a double bond - Alkenes general formula CnH2n just like
cycloalkanes - Names end with -ene (compared to -ane ending of
alkanes)
12Naming alkenes and alkynes
- Ethene is the simplest alkene (CH2CH2)
- Common name is ethylene
- When there are more than one possible place to
put the double bond, its location must be
indicated - Start numbering carbons at end closest to the
double bond, and indicate the lower-numbered
carbon involved in double bond - Ex. 1-butene CH2CHCH2CH3
- 2-butene CH3CHCHCH3
- Alkynes are named the same way, with -yne instead
of -ene
13Aromatic hydrocarbons
- Benzene ring six-membered carbon ring with
alternating single- and double-bonds
14Nomenclature of aromatic hydrocarbons
- For singly substitued benzenes, use substituent
names and benzene as the suffix (ex.
Methylbenzene, ethylbenzene, etc.) - When 2 identical groups are substituted on a
benzene, ortho-, meta-, and para- are used to
differentiate the isomers - Multiple substituents require the benzene ring to
be numbered from 1-6 so that the substitutents
get the smallest possible numbers
15Hydrocarbon derivatives
- Most organic molecules contain elements other
than carbon and hydrogen - Heteroatom atom thats not C or H in an organic
molecule - Functional group common grouping of atoms which
reacts in a particular way - Oxygen-containing functional groups are the most
common
16Oxygen-containing functional groups
- Molecule fragments which symbolize
oxygen-containing functional groups - R and R symbols for general hydrocarbon groups
Alcohol Aldehyde
Ether Ester
Ketone Carboxylic acid
17Alcohols
- Alcohol ROH functional group
- Named with similar rules to hydrocarbons
- Main chain must contain carbon bonded to OH
- Suffix -ol on chain name
- Position of OH group indicated by number (omit
if unnecessary) - Ex. Methanol, ethanol, 2-propanol
18Ethers
- Ether ROR
- Common name list the two R groups and suffix
with ether - Ex. Methyl ethyl ether, diethyl ether
- IUPAC name alkoxy derivative of longer chain
- Ex. Methoxy ethane, ethoxy ethane
- Diethyl ether (or just ether) used as solvent,
previously an anesthetic
19Aldehydes
- Aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and esters
all contain a carbonyl group (CO double bond) - Aldehyde carbonyl with a hydrogenattached
- Usually abbreviated CHO
- Methanal CH2O (common name formaldehyde)
- Ethanal CH3CHO (common name acetaldehyde)
20Ketones
- Ketone carbonyl with two hydrocarbon groups
attached - Abbreviated CO
- Named with -one suffix on stem name, number
indication position of carbonyl - Propanone CH3COCH3 (common name acetone)
- 2-butanone CH3COCH2CH3 (common name methyl
ethyl ketone)
21Carboxylic acids
- Carboxylic acids contain a carboxyl group, COOH
- Named like aldehydes, but with-oic acid as
suffix - Many have common names
- CH3COOH ethanoic acid - vinegar (common name
acetic acid) - CH3(CH2)2COOH butanoic acid - rancid
dairy(common name butyric acid)
22Esters
- Ester RCOOR
- Formed by reaction of alcohol with carboxylic
acid - Ex. Ethanol Acetic acid ? Ethyl acetate
- Pleasant, fragrant smells
- Many familiar fruit smells are esters
23Nitrogen-containing functional groups
- Amine RnNH3-n
- Generally sharp- or strong-smelling
- Ammonia NH3
- Triethylamine (CH3CH2)3N smells like dead fish
24Amides
- Amides RCONH2 or RCONHR
- Formed by reaction of amine with carboxylic acid,
similar to ester formation