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Organic Chemistry The study of carbon compounds. Over 10 million compounds naturally exist More than 300 000 are synthesized Inorganic vs Organic – oxides of carbon (CO2, CO) – carbonates,bicarbonates (NaHCO3,CaCO3) – cyanides (NaCN, etc) – any carbon attached to a metal and no H • Hydrocarbons containing CxHy Origin of organic compounds • Originally from “organic” meaning life • Not just chemistry of life, chemistry of carbon • Naturally occurring organic compounds are found in plants, animals, and fossil fuels • All of these rely on the “fixing” of C from CO2 • Synthetic organic compounds are derived from fossil fuels or plant material The diversity of carbon compounds is based on the fact carbon atoms Form 4 Bonds • Forms strong covalent and nonpolar bonds with itself and other elements Review: • Lewis Structure, Structural formula, Line diagrams Carbon molecules form complex 3-D shapes Common Molecular Shapes • Tetrahedral • Trigonal planar • Linear • Angular • Trigonal pyramidal Simplest Hydrocarbons Alkanes C H H H H H C C C C C H H H H H H Alkynes C Alkenes C H H C H H H C C C C C H H H H H Aromatics C H H C C C H H H C C C H H H H H H H C C C C H C C H H Naming Hydrocarbons (nomenclature) Naming: common vs. IUPAC • Common names used in the 1800’s are still used for some compounds today: eg. H C C Commonly known as Acetylene H IUPAC: Ethyne • The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) was established in 1900s • Systematic method allows an infinite number of compounds to be named given a few rules Mnemonic for first four prefixes First four prefixes • • • • MethEthPropBut- Monkeys Eat Peeled Bananas Other prefixes Decade ? Decimal • Pent• Oct- • Dec- Decathalon • Hex-, Hept-, Non- Alkanes • Are straight or branched-chain containing only single bonds • Are a homologous series –a group of compounds whose members differ by the addition of the same structural group • Named by using prefix and ending -ane TASK • Write chemical and structural formula for all alkanes that contain up to 10 carbons • • • • • • • • • • • Methane CH4 Ethane CH3CH3 Propane CH3CH2CH3 Butane CH3CH2CH2CH3 Pentane Hexane Heptane Octane Nonane Decane This is just the beginning…………………………………………………………….. You may have noticed that branching creates enormous variation Try Naming These CH2 H3C CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 CH2 Structural Isomers • Substances with the same chemical formula by different arrangements of atoms • Eg. Butane & 2 methyl-propane ***Isomers have different physical and chemical properties TASK: Draw all the isomers for pentane and hexane Did you know? • 3 isomers of pentane • 5 isomers of hexane • Heptane-9 • Octane-18 • Nonane-35 • Decane-75 • making a total of 150 different possible alkane compounds containing 10 carbons. Greater complexity exists because organic compounds can form Cyclic (ring) structures? • Cyclic structures are circular • Have “cyclo” in name • Eg. Cyclopropane Cyclopentane H CH2 H 2C CH2 H H H C C H H C C C H H H H TASK • Study the following graphic. • What 2 trends can be identified? • Hypothesize why these trends exist. • TASK 2: Compare, contrast and explain the physical properties of the first 10 alkanes Background: formulas for HxCy • CH single bonds Alkanes= CnH2n+2, • CH with one double bond Alkenes= CnH2n, • CH with two double bonds Alkynes= CnH2n-2 • Q - How many hydrogens in each of these: Alkane C6H Alkene C22H H 3C CH3 Basic names of hydrocarbons • Hydrocarbon names are based on: – 1) class – 2) # of C, – 3) side chain type – 4) position Q - What names would be given to these: 7C, 9C alkane heptane, nonane 2C, 4C alkyne ethyne, butyne 1C, 3C alkene does not exist, propene Numbering carbons Q- draw pentene A- Where’s the bond? H3C 5 1 We number C atoms H H 1-pentene C C C C H H H H 4 2 3 2 4 1 5 H • Always start numbering for the carbon nearest the double bond the lowest number • Q - Name these 2-butene H3C H3 C C H H C C 2H 4 CH3 Ethene CH3 3-nonyne Multiple multiple bonds H 3C CH3 2,3-heptadiene H3C C C C C C C 2,4,6-nonatriyne • • • • CH2 CH3 Rules Give 1st bond lowest # include di, tri, tetra, penta, etc. before ene/yne Comma between #s, hyphen between #-letter H H C H C C C HC 2-butyne H H2C C CH2 CH 1,2,4-pentatriene CH3CH2CH2CH=C=CH2 1,2-hexadiene H H Cyclic structures Q- Draw these: cyclobutene 1,3-cyclopentadiene H H2C CH2 HC CH H H C C C H cyclopropane C C H CH2 H H 2C CH2 Naming side chains CH3 H3C • Names are made up of: side chains, root • 2,3-dimethylpentane CH3 • Root is the longest possible HC chain • Must contain multiple bonds if present • Add -yl to get name of side chain H C 3 • Common side chains include: CH3- methyl CH3CH2- ethyl CH3CH2CH2- propyl (CH3)2CHisopropyl CH3 CH * CH3 Naming side chains Example: use the rules on the bottom of handout to name the following structure CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH3 CH3 Rule 1: choose the correct ending ene Naming side chains CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH3 CH3 Rule 2: longest carbon chain ene Naming side chains CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH3 CH3 Rule 3: attach prefix (according to # of C) 1-hexene ene Naming side chains CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH2 CH3 CH2 C CH3 CH3 Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 6 CH3 CH3 Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 ethyl CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 CH3 6 CH3 methyl methyl Rule 5: Determine name for side chains 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 ethyl CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 CH3 6 CH3 methyl methyl Rule 6: attach name of branches 2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 ethyl CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 CH3 6 CH3 methyl methyl Rule 7: list alphabetically 2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 ethyl CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 CH3 6 CH3 methyl methyl Rule 8,9: group similar branches 2-ethyl-4-methyl-4-methyl-1-hexene 1-hexene Naming side chains CH2 ethyl CH2 CH3 1 CH3 CH2 C 2 5 CH2 C 3 4 CH3 6 CH3 methyl methyl Rule 8,9: group similar branches 2-ethyl-4,4-dimethyl-1-hexene Try Naming Side Chains H3C H3C CH2 CH CH3 H2C CH2 CH CH CH2 CH3 H3C CH3 3-methylhexane CH2 CH2 CH3 CH CH3 4-ethyl-2,3-dimethylheptane CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH CH CH2 CH CH3 CH2 CH3 5-ethyl-2,4,6-trimethyloctane Naming side chains Name the structures below CH3 CH H3C CH2 CH CH3 H2C H3C H3C 3-ethyl-2-methylpentane CH3 CH3 3-ethyl-1,5,5trimethylcyclohexene CH3 Try Drawing These 2,2-dimethyloctane 1,3-dimethylcyclopentane 1,1-diethylcyclohexane 6-ethyl-5-isopropyl-7-methyl-1-octene Try Naming CH3 CH3 H3C CH3 CH3 CH3 Aromatic Hydrocarbons • Aromatic compounds contain benzene ring structures and their derivatives. • Benzene (C6H6) • most commonly used organic (nonpolar) solvent • very stable substance, unreactive • toxic if inhaled-carcinogenic • produced by processing coal, crude oil, gasoline or the combustion of rubber tires • if it occurs as a side chain it is called a phenyl group Resonance • The properties of this compound can be explained by following theory: -the chemical bonds between carbon atoms are not single or double -all bonds between carbons in the benzene ring are identical in length and strength -there is an even distribution of valence electrons around the entire molecule. • The resonance of the single and double bonds accounts for the stability of aromatic compounds. • This is illustrated by resonance structures: Aromatic nomenclature H3C There are 2 naming methods H3C 1) Numbering carbons 2) ortho, meta, para (stomp) 1,2-dimethylbenzene orthodimethylbenzene CH3 ST Ortho Meta H3C H3C Para 1,3-dimethylbenzene metadimethylbenzene H3C CH3 1,4-dimethylbenzene paradimethylbenzene