Title: Unit 3Organic Chemistry
1Unit 3 Organic Chemistry
2Introduction
- Organic Chemistry is the study of the molecular
compounds of carbon. - eg. CH4 CH3OH CH3NH2
- Organic compounds exclude oxides of carbon and
ions containing carbon. - ie. CO, CO2, KCN, CaCO3
- are NOT organic compounds!!
3History of Organic Chemistry
- Organic chemistry can be traced back to ancient
times when medicine men extracted chemicals from
plants and animals to treat members of their
tribes - Organic chemistry was first defined as a branch
of modern science in the early 1800's by Jon
Jacob Berzelius
4- Berzelius believed in Vitalism - organic
compounds could only originate from living
organisms through the action of some vital force - organic compounds originate in living or
once-living matter - inorganic compounds come from "mineral" or
non-living matter
5- In 1828, Friedrich Wöhler discovered that urea -
an organic compound - could be made by heating
ammonium cyanate (an inorganic compound). - NH4OCN(aq) ? (NH2)2CO(s)
organic
inorganic
6- organic chemistry branched into disciplines such
as polymer chemistry, pharmacology,
bioengineering and petro-chemistry - 98 of all known compounds are organic
7- The huge number of organic compounds is due
mainly to the ability of carbon atoms to form
stable chains, branched chains, rings, branched
rings, multiple rings, and multiple bonds (double
and triple bonds) to itself and to many other
non-metal atoms.
8Sources of Organic Compounds
- 1. Carbonized Organic Matter
- - fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas
- - basis for the petrochemical industry
- 2. Living Organisms
- eg - penicillin from mold
- - ASA from the bark of a willow tree
9- 3. Invention
- - antibiotics, aspirin, vanilla flavoring, and
heart drugs are manufactured from organic
starting materials - - plastics
10Structural Isomers
- Structures that have the same molecular formula
but different structural formulas are called
structural isomers - eg. C4H10
- Practice Draw all structural isomers of
C5H12 and C6H14
11Structural Isomers
- structural isomers have the same chemical formula
but have different chemical and physical
properties.
12Classifying Organic Compounds
Organic Compounds
13- hydrocarbons consist of carbon and hydrogen atoms
only - eg. Methane - CH4
- hydrocarbon derivatives have one or more hydrogen
atoms replaced by another nonmetallic atom - eg. bromomethane - CH3Br
- methanol - CH3OH
14Hydrocarbons
AlkAnes
AlkEnes
AlkYnes
15- aliphatic hydrocarbons have carbon atoms bonded
in chains or rings with only single, double, or
triple bonds - aromatic hydrocarbons contain at least one 6
carbon benzene ring
16Aliphatic Hydrocarbons
- 1. Alkanes
- Alkanes are hydrocarbons that have only single
bonds between carbon atoms - general formula CnH2n2
- eg. C3H8 C6H14
17IUPAC prefixes
Prefix of carbon atoms
meth 1
eth 2
prop 3
but 4
pent 5
hex 6
hept 7
oct 8
non 9
dec 10
18Complete this table for the first 10 alkanes
methane CH4
ethane
propane
19- A series of compounds which differ by the same
structural unit is called a homologous series - eg. each successive member of the alkanes
increases by CH2
20Representing Alkanes (4 ways)
- 1. Structural formulas
- eg. propane
-
21- Hydrogen atoms may be omitted from structural
formulas - eg. propane
22- 2. Condensed Structural Formula
- eg. propane
- CH3-CH2-CH3
23- 3. Line Structural Diagrams
- eg propane
- (the endpoint of each segment is a carbon atom)
24- 4. Expanded Molecular Formulas
- eg. propane
- CH3CH2CH3
25Alkyl Groups
- An alkyl group has one less hydrogen than an
alkane. - General Formula CnH2n 1
- To name an alkyl group, use the prefix to
indicate the of carbon atoms followed by the
suffix yl - eg. -C7H15 heptyl
26Alkyl Groups
- methyl -CH3
- ethyl -C2H5 or -CH2CH3
- propyl -C3H7 or -CH2CH2CH3
27Alkyl Groups
- Branched alkanes are alkanes that contain one or
more alkyl groups -
- eg.
28Naming Branched Alkanes
- Find the longest continuous chain of carbons and
name it using the alkane name. This is the parent
chain. - Number the carbons in the parent chain starting
from the end closest to branching. These numbers
will indicate the location of alkyl groups.
29Naming Branched Alkanes
- List the alkyl groups in alphabetical order. Use
Latin prefixes if an alkyl group occurs more than
once. - (di 2, tri 3, tetra 4, etc.)
- Use a number to show the location of each alkyl
group on the parent.
30Naming Branched Alkanes
- Use commas to separate numbers, and hyphens to
separate numbers and letters.Â
31Naming Branched Alkanes
ethyl
7 6 5 4 3
2 1
methyl
4-ethyl-3-methylheptane
32Naming Branched Alkanes
- Practice
- p. 336 - 339 s 5 - 11
33Alkenes and Alkynes
- saturated compounds contain only single bonds
between carbon atoms - eg. alkanes
- saturated compounds have the maximum number of
hydrogen atoms bonded to carbon atoms
34Alkenes and Alkynes
- unsaturated compounds contain double or triple
bonds between carbon atoms - eg. alkenes and alkynes
35Alkenes and Alkynes
- General Formulas
- Alkenes CnH2n
- Alkynes CnH2n - 2
-
36Naming Alkenes and Alkynes
- Name the longest continuous chain that contains
the double/triple bond. Use the smallest
possible number to indicate the position of the
double or triple bond.
37Naming Alkenes and Alkynes
- Branches are named using the same rules for
alkanes. Number the branches starting at the
same end used to number the multiple bond.
38Naming Alkenes and Alkynes
- p. 347 s 17 - 19
- p. 354 s 28 29
39Cyclic Hydrocarbons
- Pp. 356 358
- questions 30 31
403-ethyl-1-methylcyclopentane
cyclopentane
ethyl
methyl
1-ethyl-3-methylcyclopentane
41methyl
1,2,3,4-tetramethylcyclohexane
42Aromatic Compounds
- Aromatic hydrocarbons contain at least one
benzene ring. - The chemical formula for benzene, C6H6 , was
determined by Michael Faraday in 1825. - Structural formula was determined by August
Kekulé in 1865.
43Aromatic Compounds
- benzene ring consists of six carbon atoms, each
of which is bonded to a hydrogen atom - (Try to draw this!!)
- C6H6 can be drawn with alternating single and
double bonds.
44Aromatic Compounds
- While CC double bonds are shorter than C-C
single carbon bonds, x-ray crystallography shows
that all six C-C bonds in benzene are the same
length. - Benzene molecules behave like alkanes in chemical
reactions, not like the alkenes
45Aromatic Compounds
- Kekulé thought benzene could exist in two forms
and used the idea of resonance to explain its
structure. - The resonance structure is an average of the
electron distributions.
46Aromatic Compounds
47Aromatic Compounds
- bonding electrons that were thought to be in the
double bonds are delocalized and shared equally
over the 6 carbon atoms - the bonds in benzene are like 1 ½ bonds
somewhere between single and double.
48Naming Aromatic Compounds
- an alkyl benzene has one or more H atoms replaced
by an alkyl group. - name the alkyl groups, using numbers where
necessary, followed by the word benzene.
49Aromatic Compounds
methylbenzene
ethylbenzene
propylbenzene
50Aromatic Compounds
1,3-dimethylbenzene
1,4-dimethylbenzene
1,2-dimethylbenzene
51Aromatic Compounds
- ortho- means positions 1 and 2 and is represented
by an italicized "o" - meta- means positions 1 and 3 and is represented
by an italicized "m" - para- means positions 1 and 4 and is represented
by an italicized "p"
52Aromatic Compounds
m-dimethylbenzene
p-dimethylbenzene
o-dimethylbenzene
53Aromatic Compounds
- Benzene is treated as a branch if it is not
attached to the terminal carbon of an alkyl group - Benzene as a branch is called phenyl
54Aromatic Compounds
2-phenylpropane
propylbenzene
55Aromatic Compounds
56Aromatic Compounds
57Aromatic Compounds
- p. 361 s 32 35
- Hydrocarbons Practice
- pp. 363, 364
- s 4 9
- Test!!
58Hydrocarbon Derivatives
- Hydrocarbon Derivatives have one or more H atoms
replaced by another nonmetallic atom - Types of derivatives
- alcohols
- ethers
- aldehydes
- ketones
- carboxylic acids
- organic halides
- esters
59Hydrocarbon Derivatives
- A functional group is the reactive group of atoms
that gives a family of derivatives its distinct
properties. - The general formula for a derivative is
- R - functional group
- where R stands for any alkyl group.
Bonded to
60Hydrocarbon Derivatives
hydroxyl group
- eg. ALCOHOLS R-OH
- ethanol C2H5OH
- propanol C3H7OH
- CARBOXYLIC ACIDS R-COOH
- ethanoic acid CH3COOH
- propanoic acid C2H5COOH
carboxyl group
61Hydrocarbon Derivatives
- Types of derivatives (See p. 378)
- Alcohols pp. 386 - 388
- Ethers pp. 394 396
- Aldehydes Ketones pp. 402,403
- Carboxylic Acids pp.405, 406
- Alkyl Halides pp. 390, 391
- Esters pp. 410, 411