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INTRODUCTION TO LEWIS ACID
INTRODUCTION TO LEWIS ACID

... 2. A negatively charged species is usually a stronger nucleophile or base than its neutral analog. Thus, hydroxide ion is stronger, both as a base and as a nucleophile, than water. 3. Carbon bonded to a metal has strong negative character, revealed when writing resonance structures. The carbon atom ...
Chemistry of Carbon
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... Chemistry of Life  Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds  C atoms are versatile building blocks bonding properties  4 stable covalent bonds ...
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... 2. Carbon atoms are the most versatile building blocks of molecules • With a total of 6 electrons, a carbon atom has 2 in the first shell and 4 in the second shell. • Carbon has little tendency to form ionic bonds by loosing or gaining 4 electrons. • Instead, carbon usually completes its valence sh ...
Organic Chemistry Day 1 Notes - Bremen High School District 228
Organic Chemistry Day 1 Notes - Bremen High School District 228

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... shows that salicylic acid has an –OH group and –COOH group both attached to a benzene ring; we can now rename it HYDROXYBENZOIC ACID. However, it could be one of 3 possible isomers: 2-hydroxybenzoic acid, 3hydroxybenzoic acid and 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. Mass spectroscopy can determine which isomer we ...
(H) +
(H) +

... Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ...
a.     b.     c.      d.
a. b. c. d.

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mc_ch22 - WordPress.com
mc_ch22 - WordPress.com

... Classes of Organic Compounds • A functional group gives an organic compound properties that are very different from those of the corresponding hydrocarbon. • The compounds in the table on the next slide all have four carbon atoms, but they have very different physical properties due to their differe ...
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... Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings ...
HYDROCARBONS HYDROCARBONS Types of Hydrocarbons
HYDROCARBONS HYDROCARBONS Types of Hydrocarbons

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< 1 ... 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 ... 141 >

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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