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Intro to Organic Reactions
Intro to Organic Reactions

... Intro to Organic Reactions ...
Whitten, Davis, and Peck, General Chemistry, 6th Edition
Whitten, Davis, and Peck, General Chemistry, 6th Edition

... Hornback’s Organic Chemistry, Second Edition The table below matches sections from the book with recommended CER labs. Click on the experiment title to view a PDF of each lab. Go to www.CERLabs.com to search the complete CER database and to learn more about customizing your lab manual through CER. T ...
File - Mr. Heff`s Class
File - Mr. Heff`s Class

... Aromatic compounds include benzene or are benzene based and have benzene-like structures and properties. History of Aromatic Hydrocarbons -Michael Faraday in 1825 determined Benzene’s chemical formula to be C 6H6 -The idea of the benzene structure came to August Kekulé in a dream in 1865. -Kekulé's ...
Experiment 7 – Dehydration of Methylcyclohexanols
Experiment 7 – Dehydration of Methylcyclohexanols

Chapter Seven PPT
Chapter Seven PPT

... • Hydrocarbons Containing Double and Triple Bonds • Unsaturated Compounds (Less than Maximum H Atoms) • Alkenes also Referred to as Olefins • Properties Similar to those of Corresponding Alkanes • Slightly Soluble in Water • Dissolve Readily in Nonpolar or Low Polarity Solvents • Densities of Alkene ...
Organic Chemistry - Snow College | It's SNOWing
Organic Chemistry - Snow College | It's SNOWing

... – trifluoromethanesulfonyl chloride (trif) ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Carboxylic acids, or organic acids ...
Quiz #3 will be concerning Types of Organic Compounds and types
Quiz #3 will be concerning Types of Organic Compounds and types

... Know what types of functional groups are found in each type of compound. Be able to identify compound types if I draw a picture of the compound. (Like we did in lab for practice before we started the Ester Labs) – Make sure you look over the sheet of types of compounds. You must memorize which type ...
Ch.04Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life
Ch.04Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life

... Carboxylic acids, or organic acids ...
Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry

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Sample Exam 1
Sample Exam 1

... One of the following statements about the relationship of % s character to organic structure is false. Identify which statement is false. a. The % s character and effective electronegativity are directly proportional to one another. b. An sp3 orbital has greater % s character than an sp2 orbital. c. ...
Organic Tutorial 1st Year MT03
Organic Tutorial 1st Year MT03

... Reading: Most of the general texts carry decent sections on this work but probably the best are Clayden et al. “Organic Chemistry”, Wothers and Warren “Chemical Structure and Reactivity”, Peter Sykes,“A Guidebook to Mechanism in Organic Chemistry”, and Eames & Peach “Stereochemistry at a Glance”. No ...
polymerisation
polymerisation

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File
File

... Amides and carboxylic acids both contain carbonyl groups. Amides have the carbonyl carbon bonded to a nitrogen atom, but carboxylic acids have the carbonyl carbon bonded to a hydroxyl group. 19. What happens to the double bond of a monomer participating in the formation of an addition polymer? One o ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... Recall the properties of some common polymers Recall that polyesters and polyamides are formed by condensation polymerisation Recall the properties and uses of some condensation polymers Work out the repeating unit in condensation polymers Recall that peptides are examples of condensation polymers ...
Chapter 5
Chapter 5

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1. Summarize the philosophies of vitalism and
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... arrangement of their atoms number of possible isomers increases as carbons increase location of double bonds differ  ...
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... Optical Isomers A form of stereoisomerism • In stereoisomerism, the atoms making up the isomers are joined up in the same order, but still ...
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NOMENCLATURE VI This exercise covers the basics of organic

... numbering the chain, and it must be part of the longest chain (this is true even when another chain contains more carbon atoms). Only functional groups containing oxygen and/or nitrogen will be considered at this time. For indicating the formulas of various derivatives, it is common practice to use ...
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- ILM.COM.PK

... Recall the properties of some common polymers Recall that polyesters and polyamides are formed by condensation polymerisation Recall the properties and uses of some condensation polymers Work out the repeating unit in condensation polymers Recall that peptides are examples of condensation polymers ...
Worksheet for Quiz 7 (and Exam 3)
Worksheet for Quiz 7 (and Exam 3)

... and CiC (371-373, 374-381 with heads/tails on 379-380). Also, my pictures below show: • how 2 electrons in the second bond of C=C help form 2 monomer-connecting bonds in the polymer ; • 4-step reminders for writing a condensed equation: 1a (draw correct monomer structure and related repeating-unit s ...
Carbon Chemistry
Carbon Chemistry

... of hydrogens for each carbon. – Other name is Alkane. ...
Chapter 7 Notes - Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols Functional groups alcohol
Chapter 7 Notes - Alcohols, Ethers, Thiols Functional groups alcohol

... alcohols have higher boiling points than alkanes (nonpolar) or alkyl halides (polar, but no H-bonds) ethers are polar but have no H-bonds (pentane and diethyl ether both boil at about 35°) H-bonds hold together the strands of DNA ("velcro" effect) ...
Document
Document

... 2. Hydrocarbon- is a compound that contains only the elements carbon and hydrogen. 3. Structural formula- shows the kind, number, and arrangement of atoms in a molecule. 4. Isomers- compounds that have the same chemical formula but different structural formulas. 5. Saturated hydrocarbons- a hydrocar ...
Alkanes – Molecules w/o functional Groups
Alkanes – Molecules w/o functional Groups

... • Go = -RT ln K (in kcal/mol) • Negative Go - release of energy • Free energy change – changes in bond strength (enthalpy H) & degree of order ...
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Alkene



In organic chemistry, an alkene is an unsaturated hydrocarbon that contains at least one carbon–carbon double bond. Alkene, olefin, and olefine are used often interchangeably (see nomenclature section below). Acyclic alkenes, with only one double bond and no other functional groups, known as mono-enes, form a homologous series of hydrocarbons with the general formula CnH2n. Alkenes have two hydrogen atoms less than the corresponding alkane (with the same number of carbon atoms). The simplest alkene, ethylene (C2H4), which has the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) name ethene is the organic compound produced on the largest scale industrially. Aromatic compounds are often drawn as cyclic alkenes, but their structure and properties are different and they are not considered to be alkenes.
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