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Organic Chemistry

The study of carbon compounds.


Over 10 million compounds naturally exist
More than 300 000 are synthesized
Inorganic vs Organic
– oxides of carbon (CO2, • Hydrocarbons
CO) containing CxHy
– carbonates,bicarbonates
(NaHCO3,CaCO3)

– cyanides (NaCN, etc)

– any carbon attached to a


metal and no H
Origin of organic compounds
• Originally from “organic” meaning life
• Not just chemistry of life, chemistry of carbon

• Naturally occurring organic compounds are found in plants,


animals, and fossil fuels

• All of these rely on the “fixing” of C from CO2

• Synthetic organic compounds are derived from fossil fuels


or plant material
The diversity of carbon compounds is based on
the fact carbon atoms Form 4 Bonds
• Forms strong covalent and nonpolar bonds with itself
and other elements
Review:
• Lewis Structure, Structural formula, Line diagrams
Carbon molecules form complex 3-D shapes

Common Molecular Shapes

• Tetrahedral

• Trigonal planar

• Linear

• Angular

• Trigonal pyramidal
Simplest Hydrocarbons
Alkanes C C Alkenes C C
H H H H H H H H
H C C C C C H H C C C C C H
H H H H H H H H H H

Alkynes C C Aromatics H
H C H
H H H C C
H C C C C C H C C
H C H
H H H
H
Naming Hydrocarbons
(nomenclature)
Naming: common vs. IUPAC
• Common names used in the 1800’s are still used for some
compounds today: eg.

H C C H
Commonly known IUPAC: Ethyne
as Acetylene

• The International Union of Pure and Applied


Chemistry (IUPAC) was established in 1900s

• Systematic method allows an infinite number


of compounds to be named given a few rules
Mnemonic for first four prefixes

First four prefixes


• Meth- Monkeys
• Eth- Eat
• Prop- Peeled
• But- Bananas
Other prefixes

• Pent-
Decade

?
Decimal
• Oct-
• Dec-
Decathalon • Hex-, Hept-, Non-
Alkanes
• Are straight or branched-chain containing
only single bonds
• Are a homologous series –a group of
compounds whose members differ by the
addition of the same structural group
• Named by using prefix and ending -ane
TASK
• Write chemical and structural formula for all alkanes that
contain up to 10 carbons
• Methane CH4
• Ethane CH3CH3
• Propane CH3CH2CH3
• Butane CH3CH2CH2CH3
• Pentane
• Hexane
• Heptane
• Octane
• Nonane
• Decane
• This is just the beginning……………………………………………………………..
You may have noticed that branching creates enormous variation
Try Naming These
CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3
H3C CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2
Structural Isomers
• Substances with the same chemical formula
by different arrangements of atoms
• Eg. Butane & 2 methyl-propane

***Isomers have different physical and chemical properties


TASK: Draw all the isomers for
pentane and hexane
Did you know?
• 3 isomers of pentane
• 5 isomers of hexane
• Heptane-9
• Octane-18
• Nonane-35
• Decane-75
• making a total of 150 different possible alkane
compounds containing 10 carbons.
Greater complexity exists because organic compounds can
form Cyclic (ring) structures?
• Cyclic structures are circular
• Have “cyclo” in name

• Eg. Cyclopropane Cyclopentane

H H
CH2 H C H
H C C H
H2C CH2
C C
H H
H H
TASK
• Study the following graphic.
• What 2 trends can be
identified?
• Hypothesize why these trends
exist.

• TASK 2: Compare, contrast


and explain the physical
properties of the first 10 alkanes
Background: formulas for HxCy

• CH single bonds Alkanes= CnH2n+2,


• CH with one double bond Alkenes= CnH2n,
• CH with two double bonds Alkynes= CnH2n-2

• Q - How many hydrogens in each of these:


Alkane C6H
Alkene C22H
H 3C CH3
Basic names of hydrocarbons
• Hydrocarbon names are based on:
– 1) class
– 2) # of C,
– 3) side chain type
– 4) position

Q - What names would be given to these:


7C, 9C alkane heptane, nonane
2C, 4C alkyne ethyne, butyne
1C, 3C alkene
does not exist, propene
Numbering carbons
Q- draw pentene H H 1-pentene
A- Where’s the bond? H3C C C C C H
5
1 4
2 3 2
4 1
5
We number C atoms H H H H

• Always start numbering for the carbon nearest the double


bond the lowest number

• Q - Name these
H
H 3C C C2H4
2-butene C CH3
H
Ethene
H3C CH3 3-nonyne
Multiple multiple bonds
H 3C CH3 2,3-heptadiene

H3C C C C C C C CH2
2,4,6-nonatriyne CH3
• Rules
• Give 1st bond lowest #
• include di, tri, tetra, penta, etc. before ene/yne
• Comma between #s, hyphen between #-letter

H H 2-butyne HC C CH2
H C C C C H H2C CH
H H 1,2,4-pentatriene
CH3CH2CH2CH=C=CH2 1,2-hexadiene
Cyclic structures
Q- Draw these:

cyclobutene 1,3-cyclopentadiene cyclopropane

H H
H2C CH2 C CH2
H H
C C
HC CH H2C CH2
C C
H H
Naming side chains CH3

• Names are made up H3C CH3


of: side chains, root
• 2,3-dimethylpentane CH3
• Root is the longest possible HC chain
• Must contain multiple bonds if present
• Add -yl to get name of side chain H C CH3
3
CH
• Common side chains include:
*
CH3- methyl CH3CH2- ethyl
CH3CH2CH2- propyl (CH3)2CH-
isopropyl
Naming side chains
Example: use the rules on the bottom of
handout to name the following structure
CH2 CH2 CH3

CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3

CH3

Rule 1: choose the correct ending


ene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3

CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3

CH3

Rule 2: longest carbon chain


ene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3

CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3

CH3

Rule 3: attach prefix (according to # of C)


1-hexene
ene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3

CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3

CH3

Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon


1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4
CH3

Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon


1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


ethyl 1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4 methyl
CH3
methyl
Rule 5: Determine name for side chains
1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


ethyl 1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4 methyl
CH3
methyl
Rule 6: attach name of branches
2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene
1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


ethyl 1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4 methyl
CH3
methyl
Rule 7: list alphabetically
2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene
1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


ethyl 1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4 methyl
CH3
methyl
Rule 8,9: group similar branches
2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene
1-hexene
Naming side chains

CH2 CH2 CH3


ethyl 1 5 6
CH3 CH2 C CH2 C CH3
2 3 4 methyl
CH3
methyl
Rule 8,9: group similar branches
2-ethyl-4,4-dimethyl-1-hexene
Try Naming Side Chains

H3C CH2 H3C CH2 CH2 CH3


CH CH3 CH CH CH2 CH3
H2C CH2
H3C CH
CH3
CH3
3-methylhexane
4-ethyl-2,3-dimethylheptane
CH3 CH3 CH3
CH3 CH2 CH CH CH CH2 CH CH3
CH2 CH3
5-ethyl-2,4,6-trimethyloctane
Naming side chains
Name the structures below
CH3
CH CH2
H3C CH CH3 3-ethyl-2-methylpentane
H2C
CH3

H3C CH3
3-ethyl-1,5,5-
trimethylcyclohexene
CH3
H3C
Try Drawing These
2,2-dimethyloctane

1,3-dimethylcyclopentane

1,1-diethylcyclohexane

6-ethyl-5-isopropyl-7-methyl-1-octene
Try Naming

CH3 CH3

H3C CH3

CH3 CH3
Aromatic Hydrocarbons
• Aromatic compounds contain benzene ring
structures and their derivatives.

• Benzene (C6H6)
• most commonly used organic (nonpolar)
solvent
• very stable substance, unreactive
• toxic if inhaled-carcinogenic
• produced by processing coal, crude oil,
gasoline or the combustion of rubber tires

• if it occurs as a side chain it is called a


phenyl group
Resonance
• The properties of this compound can be explained by following theory:
-the chemical bonds between carbon atoms are not single or double
-all bonds between carbons in the benzene ring are identical in length and
strength
-there is an even distribution of valence electrons around the entire molecule.

• The resonance of the single and double bonds accounts for the stability of
aromatic compounds.
• This is illustrated by resonance structures:
Aromatic nomenclature H3C

There are 2 naming methods


H3C
1) Numbering carbons
2) ortho, meta, para (stomp) 1,2-dimethylbenzene
orthodimethylbenzene
CH3

ST Ortho Meta
H3C

1,3-dimethylbenzene
H3C Para metadimethylbenzene
H3C CH3

1,4-dimethylbenzene
paradimethylbenzene

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