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Download Chapter 9 Organic chemistry: The Infinite Varietyof Carbon
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Chapter 12 Organic Chemistry: The Infinite Variety of Carbon Compounds Organic Chemistry • Chemistry of carbon-containing compounds • Most of these come from living things – Not necessarily the case • ~30 million chemical compounds known – 95% are compounds made of carbon Chapter 9 2 Carbon • Able to bond strongly to other carbon atoms – Forms long chains – Very few other atoms can form short chains, let alone long chains • Capable of forming ring structures • Bonds strongly to other elements – In particular, H, O, and N Chapter 9 3 Hydrocarbons • Made of carbon and hydrogen • Several classes • Alkanes – Contain only single bonds – Saturated hydrocarbons – Each C atom bonded to maximum number of H atoms Chapter 9 4 Alkanes • Chemical formula CnH2n+2 n = 1, 2, 3, … • CH4, methane, simplest one • C2H6, ethane • All have –ane ending – Follow a pattern Chapter 9 5 • Condensed structural formulas – Show how many hydrogens are attached to each carbon CH3-CH3 for ethane • Structural formulas show how atoms are bonded together Chapter 9 6 Isomerism • Isomers: compounds with same molecular formula but different structural formulas • Differences in structure may give rise to differences in chemical and physical properties Chapter 9 7 • Number of possible isomers increases rapidly with the number of carbons – C30H62 – >4 billion possible isomers Chapter 9 8 Chapter 9 9 Properties of Alkanes • Main property: will burn Chapter 9 10 Cyclic Hydrocarbons • Carbon atom chains in form of rings • Can be represented by structural formulas or symbolic representations Chapter 9 11 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons • Can have more hydrogen atoms added • Very important in biological systems • Alkene: hydrocarbon that contains one or more carbonto-carbon double bonds – General formula of CnHn • Simplest: ethylene, C2H4 Chapter 9 12 • Alkyne: hydrocarbon that contains one or more carbon-to-carbon triple bonds • General formula of CnH2n– 2 • Simplest: acetylene, C2H2 Chapter 9 13 Properties of Alkenes and Alkynes • Similar physical properties to alkanes • Undergo more reactions than alkanes – Addition reaction: add compounds across double bond – Importantly, they can form polymers Chapter 9 14 Aromatic Hydrocarbons • Contain double or triple bonds, but do not show the same reactivity as other unsaturated hydrocarbons H • Benzene: C6H6 • Used mainly as solvents H H H H H Chapter 9 15 Chlorinated Hydrocarbons • Add Cl to hydrocarbons – Increase reactivity of alkanes • Dissolve fats, oils, and greases – Useful for dry cleaning • Tend to accumulate in fatty tissues – If toxic, this will be a problem Chapter 9 16 Chlorofluorocarbons and Fluorocarbons • Tend to be either liquids or gases • Completely inert – Except in upper atmosphere • O2 soluble in fluorinated compounds – Temporary substitute for hemoglobin Chapter 9 17 Functional Groups • Group of atoms that gives a family of organic compounds its characteristic chemical and physical properties • Alkyl group: derived from alkane by removing a H – R stands for alkyl group in general Chapter 9 18 Chapter 9 19 Alcohol Family • • • • –OH group Replace -e with -ol CH3OH, methanol, simplest Produced industrially – Mainly a chemical intermediate Chapter 9 20 • C2H5OH, ethanol • Made industrially and by fermentation – Industrially produced alcohol has noxious substances added • Small, simple alcohols tend to be toxic Chapter 9 21 Multifunctional Alcohols • Several common alcohols have more than one –OH group • Ethylene glycol: main ingredient in antifreeze • Glycerol: used in lotions – Ingredent in some explosives Chapter 9 22 Phenol • –OH group on benzene ring – Different chemical properties than other alcohols – Behaves more like an acid • First antiseptic – Also causes skin irritation OH Chapter 9 23 Ethers • Two alkyl groups attached to same O – Example CH3CH2-O-CH2CH3 • Used mainly as solvent • Little chemical reactivity – Insoluble in water – Highly flammable Chapter 9 24 Chapter 9 25 Aldehydes and Ketones • Both contain carbonyl group (C=O) • Aldehyde: R-CHO • Ketone: R-CO-R’ Chapter 9 26 Common Aldehydes • • • • Change -e ending to -al Produced by oxidation of alcohols Formaldehyde – used as a preservative Larger ones used as fragrances – Benzaldehyde – flavor in maraschino O cherries C Chapter 9 H 27 Common Ketones • Change -e ending to -one • Acetone most common ketone – Used primarily as a solvent • Produced by oxidation of alcohols O C CH 3 H3C Chapter 9 28 Chapter 9 29 Carboxylic Acid • Contains C=O and –OH group on same carbon • Change -e to -oic acid • Acetic acid: acid in vinegar O R C Chapter 9 OH 30 Chapter 9 31 Esters • Derived from carboxylic acids and alcohols • Tend to be fragrant – Methyl butyrate – Ethyl butyrate – Ethyl formate – Methyl salicylate apple pineapple rum wintergreen Chapter 9 32 Amines • Contain N • May have 1, 2, or 3 alkyl or aromatic groups • Most biological amines are amino acids – Building blocks of proteins Chapter 9 33 Amides • N bonded directly to carbonyl group • Linkage that holds proteins together O R'' R N R' Chapter 9 34 Heterocyclic Compounds • Ring compounds that have something other than C in the ring • Occur in plants – Alkaloids: basic in solution – Examples: caffeine, morphine, cocaine • Form basic structure of DNA Chapter 9 35