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Download Halogenation, geometric and optical isomers
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Review: Addition • So called because it makes a bigger molecule (adds more stuff onto the alkene/alkyne) • Things that will undergo addition with an alkene/alkyne: – H2 – hydrogenation (usually requires a catalyst & high temperature) – X2 – I.e. Br2, Cl2, F2 – halogenation I.e. bromination (occurs rapidly at room temperature) – HX I.e. HCl, HBr, HI (hydrohalogenation – occurs at moderate rates at room T) – H2O – hydration (requires an acid catalyst, i.e. H2SO4) • Addition is always exothermic – from energy released by breaking C=C bond Addition Examples • Benzene +X2 no reaction! • Aromatics don’t undergo halogenation (or any type of addition)! – Because the product would be less stable than the resonance double bonds of the benzene! Uses: The Iodine Index • The degree of unsaturation in oils can be measured by measuring the amount of iodine that can react with the unsaturated fat or oil by addition. Each mole of C=C requires one mole of I2 to react. • The haloalkane chain is nearly colorless Therefore unsaturated hydrocarbon chains will destroy the purple brown color of iodine solutions as long as there are C=C bonds present. Uses: Bromine Test for Unsaturation • Like Iodine Index, we test for unsaturation with Br2 – Usually done for non-fats, however (i.e. cyclohexene, below, is a non-polar solvent) H H + Br2 H Br H Br Review: Geometric Isomers • Geometric Isomers are another name for cis and trans isomers • These can only occur around bonds that don’t move easily – Double or triple bonds – Single bonds in ring structures • On linear single bonds, the bond rotates too easily to have cis/trans isomers. New Material (Not Review) Geometric Isomers • Geometric Isomers of the same molecule (cis & trans) often have different physical and chemical properties – Due to differences in overall molecule shape (affects intermolecular bonding – Also because of differences in dipole moment (affects polarity) Geometric Isomers • Differences in physical properties: • 1,2-dichloroethane • cis boiling point: 60.3°C vs. • trans b.p.: 47.5°C • The cis isomer is overall more polar (all polar groups on one side) – Therefore more temporary polar interactions between molecules (adds to London dispersion Forces, or induced dipole-dipole forces) – stronger intermolecular bonds Geometric Isomers • Differences in chemical properties: • But-2-ene-1,4-dioic acid • cis: decomposes (melts) when heated to 130-131ºC – Because the H of the OH and the =O of the carboxylic acid are close together; they have more H-bonding, and are more likely to react with each other than other molecules (makes molecule into a ring) VS • trans: only melts at 286ºC – OH and =O of carboxylic acid far apart; is more tightly bonded to other molecules than to itself; higher m.p. http://fds.oup.com/www.oup.com/pdf/13/9780199151424.pdf Optical Isomers/Enantiomers • A subset of stereoisomers – Stereoisomers: 2 molecules with the same sequence of bonded atoms, but different 3D orientations in space (i.e. cis/trans) • Enantiomers/optical isomers are mirror images of each other Optical Isomers/Enantiomers • “Wait…doesn’t that make enantiomers the same molecule?” – Nope! • Their actual 3D appearance is different • Like your left and right hand; mirror images, but put one on top of the other so they face the same direction; they’re different. – Or: your left shoe won’t fit on your right foot Optical Isomers/Enantiomers • Enantiomers happen around a carbon bonded to 4 different atoms/groups – This is called the chiral carbon/asymmetric carbon – Because the bonds to a C are tetrahedral, they are not symmetrical if you look at the 3D molecule – (I.e. bolded – means “coming toward you in 3D”, --- means “going away from you in 3D”) • So when you interchange the position of 2 “opposite” groups, you get the enantiomer Optical Isomers/Enantiomers • A molecule that has enantiomers must have at least 1 chiral carbon (can have more) • A chiral carbon does not always have to have 4 different atoms/groups bonded to it I.e. -------------------------- – Rule: Make the mirror image (switch 2 opposite groups bonded to a carbon.) If the mirror image can’t be superimposed on the original molecule (doesn’t look exactly the same when you lay them on top of each other,) the two are enantiomers Terminology • Chirality – The property of a molecule having a mirror image that can’t be superimposed on the original molecule (because of different 3D structures between the two) • Racemic Mixture (/racemate) – A mixture of 50% of each enantiomer Why we care: Amino Acids • All amino acids are chiral (except glycine, has H as its R group) • I.e. D-alanine and L-alanine: • All organisms can only include one enantiomer of amino acids in their proteins (termed the L-enantiomer) – But the D-enantiomers are made in nature. – I.e. part of bacterial cell walls (not as a protein), and D-serine is a neurotransmitter in our brain • Why? – Probably just evolution Why we care: Medicine • • • In the 1950s, Thalidamide was put on the market as a sedative drug (also given to pregnant women to fight morning sickness) In 1961, it was taken off the market because it caused birth defects in children born from women who took it while pregnant The Thalidomide given medically was a racemic mixture – The R enantiomer is harmless and useful against morning sickness – The S enantiomer causes birth defects by obstructing development of blood vessels – Even if pure R-Thalidamide is ingested, the body will convert it to a racemic mixture • (This is why med school really cares if you know your organic chem…) How do we detect Chirality? • Enantiomers are not different in their physical properties (are only different in their chemical properties if they interact with enantiomers of another molecule) BUT • If you shine polarized light onto them (light that vibrates in only 1 dimension), they will deflect the light differently How do we detect Chirality? • All molecules deflect light – A pure sample of one enantiomer will deflect polarized light θº to the right – A pure sample of the other enantiomer will deflect it θº to the left • A racemic mixture has 50% of each enantiomer, therefore the 2 deflections cancel each other out – the racemic mixture will appear “optically inactive”