organic chemistry 2 acs final

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139 Terms

1
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How can an aldehyde be protected?

Using a diol and H+

2
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What does permanganate do? (KMnO4, NaOH)

Oxidizes aldehydes and primary alcohols to carboxylic acids

3
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How can an acetal (being used as a protecting group) be hydrolyzed back to it's original form?

H2O and H+ and heat

4
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At what frequency is an OH or NH bond in IR spec?

3400

5
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At what frequency is a CH (sp3) bond in IR spec?

3000-2850

6
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At what frequency is a CH (sp2) bond in IR spec?

3100-3000

7
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At what frequency is a CH (sp) bond in IR spec?

3300

8
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At what frequency is a C-C triple bond or C-N triple bond in IR spec?

2100

9
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At what frequency is C=O bond in IR spec?

1700

10
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At what frequency is a C=C bond or aromatic C-C bond in IR spec?

1600

11
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At what frequency is an aromatic C-C bond in IR spec?

1500

12
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At what frequency is carboxylic acid in IR spec?

1720 + a strong and broad band at 2500-3300

13
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At what frequency is an amide bond in IR spec?

two medium strength bands around 3400 + the carbonyl band below 1700

14
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At what frequency is an sp3 C atom in a proton NMR spec?

1

15
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At what frequency is a C atom attached to a pi system in a proton NMR?

2

16
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At what frequency is a C atom attached to an O atom in a proton NMR?

3-4

17
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At what frequency is an sp2 C atom in a proton NMR?

5-6

18
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At what frequency is an aromatic C atom in a proton NMR?

7-8

19
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At what frequency is an aldehyde C atom in a proton NMR?

10

20
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At what frequency is a carboxylic O atom in a proton NMR?

11-12

21
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At what ppm is an sp3 alkyl C atom in carbon NMR?

10-30

22
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At what ppm is an sp3 C atom attached to O, N, or X in carbon NMR?

50-70

23
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At what ppm is an sp C atom in carbon NMR?

75-90

24
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At what ppm is an sp2 C atom in carbon NMR?

100-150

25
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At what ppm is an ester, amide, or carboxyl C=O in a carbon NMR?

160-180

26
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AT what ppm is an aldehyde or ketone C=O in a carbon NMR?

190-200

27
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What are examples of oxidizing agents?

Chromium (VI) reagents like CrO3, K2Cr2O7, K2CrO4; and a manganese (VII) reagent (KMnO4).

28
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Chromium reagents = acidic conditions

29
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Manganese reagent = basic conditions

30
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Which anhydrous chromium (VI) reagents can stop oxidation of primary alcohols at the aldehyde stage?

CrO3--2 pyridine (chromium trioxide-pyridine complex), PCC (pyridinium chlorochromate) and PDC (pyridinium dichromate)

31
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In oxidative cleavage reactions, what reagents will cleave vicinal diols, alkenes, and methyl ketones?

Vicinal diols = HIO4 (periodic acid)

32
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Alkenes = ozone

33
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Methyl ketones = alkaline solutions of the halogens (haloform reaction)

34
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In oxidative addition products of alkenes and alkynes, which reagents can be used?

Cold, alkaline permanganate, osmium tetroxide and proxy acids.

35
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Chromic acid is an oxidizing reagent that

does not oxidize ketones; but it can oxidize C-C double bonds.

36
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How are reductions of carbonyl compounds usually done?

complex metal hydrides

37
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How are reductions of alkenes usually done?

Catalytic hydrogenation

38
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How are reductions of alkynes usually done?

Catalytic hydrogenation or alkali metals in ammonia (dissolving metal reductions)

39
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What can react with alcohols to produce a ketone?

PCC (converts primary alcohols to aldehydes and secondary alcohols to ketones; doesn't affect C=C bonds.

40
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What can react with secondary alcohols to give ketones?

KMnO4, NaOH. But it can also react with double bonds.

41
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What are the two types of free-radical reactions?

substitution and addition.

42
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How can the free-radical addition reaction of

43
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  1. HBr + alkene + peroxides
44
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  1. the polymerization of alkenes or dienes
45
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be initiated?

heat, peroxides, or UV light

46
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What is the trend in stability for organic radicals/carbocations?

allylic/benzylic > 3 alkyl > 2 alkyl > 1 alkyl > methyl > vinylic/aryl

47
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48
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*Allylic and benzylic radicals are especially easy to generate because of the stabilization caused by resonance.

49
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  • when formed in a ring, the C+ will form preferentially to the C that can be stabilized by resonance.
50
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What conditions will usually indicate a radical reaction?

AIBN (a radical initiator), peroxides, UV light, or high temps (300-500 C)

51
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Groups that reduce electron density of a ring by resonance or induction will

cause the ring to be less reactive than benzene

52
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Groups that increase the electron density of the ring by resonance or induction will

be more reactive than benzene

53
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Electron-donating groups cause the electron density to increase at the

ortho (next to) and para (opposite) positions. Causes electrophiles to prefer to attack at those positions

54
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Electron withdrawing groups cause electron density to be reduced at the

ortho and para position more than at the meta position. Causes electrophiles to prefer to attack at the meta position.

55
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What has the greatest influence on electron density of an aromatic ring?

Resonance

56
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What increases electron density in an aromatic ring?

Groups that have an atom with non bonded electrons

57
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What reduces electron density?

groups that have multiple bonds to an atom more electronegative than carbon

58
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What are the two distinct pathways for nucleophilic aromatic substitution?

Addition-elimination and elimination-addition.

59
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What is the addition-elimination mechanism?

  1. aromatic ring accepts a pair of electrons from a nucleophile to make an anionic intermediate. Must have a strong EWG, like a nitro (NO2) group to stabilize the anion.
60
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  1. Elimination of a leaving group. H- is a very poor leaving group, so the nucleophile must add at the site of a good leaving group. Often it is a halogen.
61
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What is the elimination-addition mechanism?

  1. strong base initiates an elimination to make a very reactive benzene
62
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  1. rapidly undergoes nucleophilic addition
63
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What is a nucleophilic aromatic substitution?

a good leaving group, at least one electron withdrawing groups that are oath or para to the leaving group. More EWG's = greater reactivity toward nucleophiles. Not as common as addition-elimination because three things are required (strong nucleophile, good leaving group, and one ore more oath hydrogen atoms).

64
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What is an important difference between the two nucleophilic substitution mechanisms?

The site of attachment of the nucleophile.

65
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Addition-elimination = nucleophile attaches to the site of the leaving group

66
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Elimination-addition = nucleophile attaches either at site of leaving group or site of oath hydrogen atom.

67
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In tautomerization, the beta-dicarbonyl compound may favor

the enol tautomer instead of the keto form

68
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What are the hot spots for reactivity in aldehydes and ketones?

  1. The carbonyl carbon atom, which is subject to addition reactions by nucleophiles
69
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  1. The alpha-carbon atom can be deprotonated, converting it into a nucleophile
70
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A hydrogen atom on an sp3 carbon atom that is alpha to a carbonyl group is

30 orders of magnitude more acidic than normal, due to resonance.

71
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What effect do strong bases have on alkoxide ions?

Quantitatively convert simple carbonyl compounds tiny their enolates.

72
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What are examples of strong bases?

LDA, NaH

73
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What can happen to an alpha carbon atom?

It can be halogenated or alkylated.

74
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What is the aldol reaction?

The nucleophilic alpha-carbon atom of one aldehyde can attack the carbonyl carbon atom of another aldehyde molecule in a dimerization reaction.

75
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76
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*Aldehydes are more reactive than ketones (steric and electronic)

77
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What is the Claisen condensation?

The alcohol portion of an ester can be displaced in a nucleophilic substitution reaction by the alpha-carbon atom.

78
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How can the product of a reaction with aldehydes, ketones, esters, nitriles, nitralkanes, and beta-dicarbonyl be predicted?

  1. Write the formula for the anion of the component with the most acidic alpha-hydrogen atom.
79
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  1. Write the formula for the product that would form following attack on the carbonyl group of the other component (either addition or substitution)
80
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In what conditions can enols act as nucleophiles?

With very reactive electrophiles like halogens or protonated carbonyl groups.

81
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What is formed when nucleophiles bond with carbonyl carbon atoms?

a tetrahedral intermediate due to the sp3 hybridized carbon atom.

82
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What is nucleophilic acyl substitution?

A nucleophile attacks at the carbonyl carbon, pushing the electron in the double bond onto the oxygen. The tetrahedral intermediate is typical of these reactions. When the lone pair on oxygen reforms the double bond, a leaving group leaves

83
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*These are subject to acid catalysis.

84
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**Protonation of the carbonyl oxygen atom increases the electrophilic character of the carbonyl carbon atom.

85
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***Stereochemistry is retained.

86
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****in basic conditions, a carboxylic acid is formed. The OH is immediately deprotonated.

87
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Protonation of a poor leaving group

increases its tendency to dissociate

88
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If the nucleophile is a weak base in nucleophilic addition,

the nucleophilic addition is reversible; the relative stabilities will be affected by the increased strain of the tetrahedral intermediate, compared to the prior sp2 structure.

89
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What is the effect of electron-releasing groups attached to the carbonyl group?

a diminished positive charge on the carbon atom.

90
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What is the effect of electron-withdrawing groups attached to a carbonyl group?

an intensified positive charge on the carbon atom.

91
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In nucleophilic addition, if the nucleophile is a primary amine or a derivative of ammonia

the tetrahedral intermediate can lose water to form the C=N bond of an imine

92
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In nucleophilic addition, if the nucleophile is a secondary amine

water can be lost from a C=C bond to form an enamine.

93
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By removing water in nucleophilic addition

the formation of acetals and imines can be favored. A reversal to the original reactant may be done in an aqueous acid solution

94
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Aldehydes and ketones that are alpha,beta-unsaturated may go through

1,2-addition or 1,4-addition with nucleophiles.

95
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*Kinetic product = 1,2-nucleophilic addition, forms faster, dominates if reaction stops before equilibrium is reached

96
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*Thermodynamic product = 1,4-nucleophilic addition, forms slower, dominates if reaction continues to reach equilibrium

97
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What conditions or reagents will typically give 1,2-addition?

Strongly basic nucleophiles like Grignard and organolithium and complex metal hydrides

98
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What conditions or reagents will typically give 1,4-additions?

Weakly basic nucleophiles and organocuprates (R2CuLi)

99
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What does NaBH4 do?

Reduces ketones and aldehydes to alcohols. Does not react with carboxylic acids, esters, or amides. But at room temperature it only reduces acyl chlorides to alcohols, due to the extreme electrophilicity.

100
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What are some examples of concerted addition reactions?

Epoxidation, carbene additions, Diels-Alder reaction.