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Chapter 20 Organic Chemistry
Chapter 20 Organic Chemistry

... and other organisms, and alerts us to dangers such as polluted air or spoiled food. • Odorants must be volatile. • However, many volatile substances have no scent at all. • Most common smells are caused by organic molecules. • The study of compounds containing carbon combined with one or more of the ...
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... lack of hydrogen bonding. However their boiling point is slightly higher than that of corresponding non-polar hydrocarbon or weakly polar ether. This may attributed to reason that aldehydes and ketones are polar compounds and thus possess intermolecular dipoledipole interaction ...
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... 2. Single and multiple covalent bonds a. Single covalent bonds (1) Where one pair of electrons is shared between two atoms. (2) Symbolized by one pair of dots or by a dash. b. Double covalent bonds (1) Where two pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms. (2) Symbolized by two pairs of dots or ...
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... when four things are bonded to a nitrogen atom, the nitrogen bears a positive charge  name the compound as a salt  replace the ending -amine (or aniline or pyridine or the like) by -ammonium (or anilinium or pyridinium or the like) and add the name of the anion ...
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... „ Polar means that even though the molecule as a whole is neutral, there are localized regions of positive and negative charge due to an unequal sharing of electrons between the atoms of the molecule. ...
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... • in aromatic alcohols (or phenols) the OH is attached directly to the ring • an OH on a side chain of a ring behaves as a typical aliphatic alcohol The first two compounds are classified as aromatic alcohols (phenols) because the OH group is attached directly to the ring. ...
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... • Leukotrienes are synthesized in cells by oxidation of arachidonic acid to 5-HPETE. • This is then converted to an epoxide, leukotriene A4. • Ring opening the epoxide yields leukotriene C4. • New asthma drugs act by blocking the synthesis of leukotriene C4, for example by inhibiting the enzyme lipo ...
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Aromaticity



In organic chemistry, the term aromaticity is formally used to describe an unusually stable nature of some flat rings of atoms. These structures contain a number of double bonds that interact with each other according to certain rules. As a result of their being so stable, such rings tend to form easily, and once formed, tend to be difficult to break in chemical reactions. Since one of the most commonly encountered aromatic system of compounds in organic chemistry is based on derivatives of the prototypical aromatic compound benzene (common in petroleum), the word “aromatic” is occasionally used to refer informally to benzene derivatives, and this is how it was first defined. Nevertheless, many non-benzene aromatic compounds exist. In living organisms, for example, the most common aromatic rings are the double-ringed bases in RNA and DNA.The earliest use of the term “aromatic” was in an article by August Wilhelm Hofmann in 1855. Hofmann used the term for a class of benzene compounds, many of which do have odors (unlike pure saturated hydrocarbons). Today, there is no general relationship between aromaticity as a chemical property and the olfactory properties of such compounds, although in 1855, before the structure of benzene or organic compounds was understood, chemists like Hofmann were beginning to understand that odiferous molecules from plants, such as terpenes, had chemical properties we recognize today are similar to unsaturated petroleum hydrocarbons like benzene.In terms of the electronic nature of the molecule, aromaticity describes the way a conjugated ring of unsaturated bonds, lone pairs of electrons, or empty molecular orbitals exhibit a stabilization stronger than would be expected by the stabilization of conjugation alone. Aromaticity can be considered a manifestation of cyclic delocalization and of resonance. This is usually considered to be because electrons are free to cycle around circular arrangements of atoms that are alternately single- and double-bonded to one another. These bonds may be seen as a hybrid of a single bond and a double bond, each bond in the ring identical to every other. This commonly seen model of aromatic rings, namely the idea that benzene was formed from a six-membered carbon ring with alternating single and double bonds (cyclohexatriene), was developed by August Kekulé (see History section below). The model for benzene consists of two resonance forms, which corresponds to the double and single bonds superimposing to produce six one-and-a-half bonds. Benzene is a more stable molecule than would be expected without accounting for charge delocalization.
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