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Topic 10 - Organic Chemistry

Organic chemistry – the chemistry of carbon containing compounds

Homologous series

  • Family of compounds that differs only by the length of its hydrocarbon chain

  • Members share a general formula and chemical properties 

  • Examples: alkanes, alkenes, alcohols

  • Melting/boiling points increase going down the series OR as LDF increases

    • Boiling point increases due to the increase in number of electrons available to participate in instantaneous dipoles

Formulas & Types of Formulas

There are different ways to draw the same molecule. 

Example: C4H8O

//need to know//

  • Empirical formula:

C4H8O

C4H8O

  • Molecular formula:

C4H8O

C4H8O

  • Full structural formula:

  • Condensed structural formula:

CH2=CHCH2CH2OH

CH2=C(CH3)CH2OH

  • Skeletal formula: //don’t need to know how to draw, just how to read it//


Naming straight-chain alkanes (alkane = single bonds)

  • Suffix – tells us the functional group of the molecule

    • For alkanes, it’s ‘-ane’

  • Prefix – tells us the length of the longest carbon chain

    • 1 carbon → meth-

    • 2 carbon → eth-

    • 3 carbon → prop-

    • 4 carbon → but-

    • 5 carbon → pent-

Examples:

  • Ethane → C2H3

  • Butane → C4H10

Naming branched-chain alkanes

  • Start by naming the longest chain

  • Add extras to say the size of a branch, its position, how many of that branch

    • Branch size – same prefixes as before; add ‘-yl’

      • 1 carbon → methyl-

    • Position – based on which carbon in the longest chain it is situated

      • Choose number to minimise the total number used (ie. can be read from left to right and from right to left)

    • Number of same branches:

      • 1 branch → nothing

      • 2 branches → di-

      • 3 branches → tri-

      • 4 branches → tetra-

  • Examples:

    • 2-methylpropane

    • 2,3-dimethylbutane

Naming straight-chain alkenes

  • Suffix – ‘-ene’

  • Prefix – the same as with alkanes

  • Add the number where the double bond is situated in the middle of the name

    • Example: pent-1-ene (double bond is found at the first carbon)

★Other naming techniques: Organic Chemistry - Naming Practice.pptx

Isomers

  • Compounds with the same molecular formula, but different structural formula

  • Structural isomers – same number of each atom, but bonded in a different order

    • Cyclic alkanes = have a circular shape 

    • Noncyclic alkanes = are linear; have the general formula CnH2n+2

Classifying Halogenoalkanes & Alcohols

  • Primary, 1°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to a single carbon 

  • Secondary, 2°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to two carbons

  • Tertiary, 3°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to three carbons

Classifying Amines

  • Primary, 1°– nitrogen is attached to one alkyl group

  • Secondary, 2°– nitrogen is attached to two alkyl groups

  • Tertiary, 3°– nitrogen is attached to three alkyl groups 

Saturated vs Unsaturated Compounds

  • Saturated – alkanes (only have single bonds)

  • Unsaturated – double/triple bonds

  • Aliphatic compounds – straight-chain compounds

  • Cycloalkanes – ring structures that contain only single bonds (C-C)

  • Arenes – ring structures consisting of alternating double bonds (C=C)

    • Benzene = arene

      • Six carbons with alternating single and double bonds in a ring shape

  • Aromatic hydrocarbons contain benzene rings

  • Bond length between carbons are of equal length

  • Bond order = 1.5

Reactions of Alkanes

Combustion:

  • Alkanes are very stable which is why they’re used as fuels

    • They release lots of energy and produce stable compounds

  • Complete combustion: 

Alkane + O2 → CO2 + H2O

  • Incomplete combustion:

Alkane + O2 → C (s) + CO (g) + CO2 + H2

//do not need to include C and CO2 unless they do not specify that they only want CO//

  • Amount of C, CO, and CO2 will vary depending on conditions

  • Alkanes are stable because of their unreactive, nonpolar, single bonds that can break

  • ΔH = negative

Substitution Reactions

Free-radical substitution

  • Free-radical - species that is formed when a molecule undergoes homolytic fission (2 e- of a covalent bond are split evenly between 2 atoms resulting in 2 free-radicals that each have a single e-

  • Example: 


Halogenation

  • Alkanes will undergo halogenation if reacted with a halide in the presence of UV light

    • Example: free-radical substitution

C2H6 + Cl2UV CH3CH2Cl + HCl

Radicals

  • Species with unpaired electrons ⇒ very reactive

  • Halogens form radicals when hit by UV light of the right frequency (Cl2UV 2Clᐧ)

    • The dot after the Cl represents the unpaired electron and tells us we have a radical 

Reaction Mechanism → Free-radical Substitution

Initiation – radicals formed by homolytic fission

Cl2UV 2Clᐧ

Propagation – these steps feed each other the radicals needed to continue the reaction

Clᐧ + C2H6 → C2H5ᐧ + HCl

C2H5ᐧ + Cl2 → C2H5Cl + Clᐧ

Termination – any 2 radicals can combine to terminate the reaction; concentration of radicals is low so this is a very rare event 

Clᐧ + Clᐧ →Cl2; Clᐧ + C2H5ᐧ → C2H5Cl; C2H5ᐧ + C2H5ᐧ → C4H10

  • A single radical can cause thousands of cycles of the propagation stage before it reaches termination

  • The same mechanism applies to all halogens

  • The alkane can be substituted many times, until ever hydrogen is replaced

Reactivity of Alkenes

  • Alkenes are considerably more reactive than alkanes and are a major industrial feedstock

    • Their reactivity is due to the double bond which contains 4 e- (a significant amount of charge)

    • Makes it attractive to electrophiles and enables it to polarise approaching molecules

  • Most reactions of alkenes are addition reactions (2 molecules come together to make a new one)

Alkenes & Hydrogen

Alkene + hydrogen → alkane

  • Reaction conditions: heat + nickel catalyst

Alkenes & Hydrogen halides

Alkene + hydrogen halide → halogenoalkane

  • Reaction conditions: nothing specific

  • If the halogen used is an aqueous solution of Bromine, the orange-brown colour of Br solution is decolourised (standard test for alkenes)

Alkenes & Water

Alkene + water → alcohol

  • Reaction conditions: water in the form of steam + phosphoric or sulfuric acid catalyst

Polymerisation

  • Under the right conditions, alkene molecules will add to each other, creating a polymer

  • Required conditions: vary from alkene to alkene + often includes high pressure, temperature and a catalyst

  • The carbons in the C=C double bonds form the carbon chain, everything else hangs off this chain

★Naming polymers: name them like alkenes even if they look like alkanes★

Alcohols as Fuels

  • Alcohols combust more readily than equivalent alkanes, but release less energy since they are already partially oxidised

Alcohol + oxygen →CO2 + H2O

  • Alcohols are used as fuels: 

    • For cars, either pure or blended with petrol

    • Methanol as fuel for competitive motorsports (Example: monster trucks)

  • Ethical considerations: most fuel ethanol is fermented from crops that could otherwise be eaten, forcing up food prices

Oxidation of Alcohol

  • Most important reaction of the alcohols is oxidation

  • A range of compounds will oxidise them, so the oxidiser is often represented as [O]

  • One oxidising agent is K2Cr2O7 (potassium dichromate), (catalysts are acidic)

    • //need to know// When using this, orange Cr (VI) is reduced to green Cr (III) 

  • Tertiary alcohols do not oxidise

Examples:

  • Partial – C3H8O + [O]→ C3H6O + H2O

  • Complete – C3H8O + [O] → C3H6O2 + H2O

There are two steps that occur during the oxidation of alcohol: distillation and reflux. 

  • Distillation of a primary alcohol – will result in an aldehyde as the aldehyde has a lower boiling point than the associated carboxylic acid

  • Distillation of a secondary alcohol – will result in a ketone 

  • Reflux – the process where the aldehyde is not removed from the solution allowing the further oxidation of the aldehyde into a carboxylic acid 

Nucleophilic Substitution

  • One of the most important reactions undergone by halogenoalkanes

  • A nucleophile is attached to positive charges

    • They either have full negative charges or delta negative charges

    • H2O and OH- are both nucleophiles

  • The carbon in the carbon-halogen bond has a delta positive charge due to the greater electronegativity of the halogen 

    • Makes it susceptible to attack by nucleophiles

  • Carboxylic acid + alcohol → ester



Topic 10 - Organic Chemistry

Organic chemistry – the chemistry of carbon containing compounds

Homologous series

  • Family of compounds that differs only by the length of its hydrocarbon chain

  • Members share a general formula and chemical properties 

  • Examples: alkanes, alkenes, alcohols

  • Melting/boiling points increase going down the series OR as LDF increases

    • Boiling point increases due to the increase in number of electrons available to participate in instantaneous dipoles

Formulas & Types of Formulas

There are different ways to draw the same molecule. 

Example: C4H8O

//need to know//

  • Empirical formula:

C4H8O

C4H8O

  • Molecular formula:

C4H8O

C4H8O

  • Full structural formula:

  • Condensed structural formula:

CH2=CHCH2CH2OH

CH2=C(CH3)CH2OH

  • Skeletal formula: //don’t need to know how to draw, just how to read it//


Naming straight-chain alkanes (alkane = single bonds)

  • Suffix – tells us the functional group of the molecule

    • For alkanes, it’s ‘-ane’

  • Prefix – tells us the length of the longest carbon chain

    • 1 carbon → meth-

    • 2 carbon → eth-

    • 3 carbon → prop-

    • 4 carbon → but-

    • 5 carbon → pent-

Examples:

  • Ethane → C2H3

  • Butane → C4H10

Naming branched-chain alkanes

  • Start by naming the longest chain

  • Add extras to say the size of a branch, its position, how many of that branch

    • Branch size – same prefixes as before; add ‘-yl’

      • 1 carbon → methyl-

    • Position – based on which carbon in the longest chain it is situated

      • Choose number to minimise the total number used (ie. can be read from left to right and from right to left)

    • Number of same branches:

      • 1 branch → nothing

      • 2 branches → di-

      • 3 branches → tri-

      • 4 branches → tetra-

  • Examples:

    • 2-methylpropane

    • 2,3-dimethylbutane

Naming straight-chain alkenes

  • Suffix – ‘-ene’

  • Prefix – the same as with alkanes

  • Add the number where the double bond is situated in the middle of the name

    • Example: pent-1-ene (double bond is found at the first carbon)

★Other naming techniques: Organic Chemistry - Naming Practice.pptx

Isomers

  • Compounds with the same molecular formula, but different structural formula

  • Structural isomers – same number of each atom, but bonded in a different order

    • Cyclic alkanes = have a circular shape 

    • Noncyclic alkanes = are linear; have the general formula CnH2n+2

Classifying Halogenoalkanes & Alcohols

  • Primary, 1°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to a single carbon 

  • Secondary, 2°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to two carbons

  • Tertiary, 3°– halogen or hydroxyl group is attached to three carbons

Classifying Amines

  • Primary, 1°– nitrogen is attached to one alkyl group

  • Secondary, 2°– nitrogen is attached to two alkyl groups

  • Tertiary, 3°– nitrogen is attached to three alkyl groups 

Saturated vs Unsaturated Compounds

  • Saturated – alkanes (only have single bonds)

  • Unsaturated – double/triple bonds

  • Aliphatic compounds – straight-chain compounds

  • Cycloalkanes – ring structures that contain only single bonds (C-C)

  • Arenes – ring structures consisting of alternating double bonds (C=C)

    • Benzene = arene

      • Six carbons with alternating single and double bonds in a ring shape

  • Aromatic hydrocarbons contain benzene rings

  • Bond length between carbons are of equal length

  • Bond order = 1.5

Reactions of Alkanes

Combustion:

  • Alkanes are very stable which is why they’re used as fuels

    • They release lots of energy and produce stable compounds

  • Complete combustion: 

Alkane + O2 → CO2 + H2O

  • Incomplete combustion:

Alkane + O2 → C (s) + CO (g) + CO2 + H2

//do not need to include C and CO2 unless they do not specify that they only want CO//

  • Amount of C, CO, and CO2 will vary depending on conditions

  • Alkanes are stable because of their unreactive, nonpolar, single bonds that can break

  • ΔH = negative

Substitution Reactions

Free-radical substitution

  • Free-radical - species that is formed when a molecule undergoes homolytic fission (2 e- of a covalent bond are split evenly between 2 atoms resulting in 2 free-radicals that each have a single e-

  • Example: 


Halogenation

  • Alkanes will undergo halogenation if reacted with a halide in the presence of UV light

    • Example: free-radical substitution

C2H6 + Cl2UV CH3CH2Cl + HCl

Radicals

  • Species with unpaired electrons ⇒ very reactive

  • Halogens form radicals when hit by UV light of the right frequency (Cl2UV 2Clᐧ)

    • The dot after the Cl represents the unpaired electron and tells us we have a radical 

Reaction Mechanism → Free-radical Substitution

Initiation – radicals formed by homolytic fission

Cl2UV 2Clᐧ

Propagation – these steps feed each other the radicals needed to continue the reaction

Clᐧ + C2H6 → C2H5ᐧ + HCl

C2H5ᐧ + Cl2 → C2H5Cl + Clᐧ

Termination – any 2 radicals can combine to terminate the reaction; concentration of radicals is low so this is a very rare event 

Clᐧ + Clᐧ →Cl2; Clᐧ + C2H5ᐧ → C2H5Cl; C2H5ᐧ + C2H5ᐧ → C4H10

  • A single radical can cause thousands of cycles of the propagation stage before it reaches termination

  • The same mechanism applies to all halogens

  • The alkane can be substituted many times, until ever hydrogen is replaced

Reactivity of Alkenes

  • Alkenes are considerably more reactive than alkanes and are a major industrial feedstock

    • Their reactivity is due to the double bond which contains 4 e- (a significant amount of charge)

    • Makes it attractive to electrophiles and enables it to polarise approaching molecules

  • Most reactions of alkenes are addition reactions (2 molecules come together to make a new one)

Alkenes & Hydrogen

Alkene + hydrogen → alkane

  • Reaction conditions: heat + nickel catalyst

Alkenes & Hydrogen halides

Alkene + hydrogen halide → halogenoalkane

  • Reaction conditions: nothing specific

  • If the halogen used is an aqueous solution of Bromine, the orange-brown colour of Br solution is decolourised (standard test for alkenes)

Alkenes & Water

Alkene + water → alcohol

  • Reaction conditions: water in the form of steam + phosphoric or sulfuric acid catalyst

Polymerisation

  • Under the right conditions, alkene molecules will add to each other, creating a polymer

  • Required conditions: vary from alkene to alkene + often includes high pressure, temperature and a catalyst

  • The carbons in the C=C double bonds form the carbon chain, everything else hangs off this chain

★Naming polymers: name them like alkenes even if they look like alkanes★

Alcohols as Fuels

  • Alcohols combust more readily than equivalent alkanes, but release less energy since they are already partially oxidised

Alcohol + oxygen →CO2 + H2O

  • Alcohols are used as fuels: 

    • For cars, either pure or blended with petrol

    • Methanol as fuel for competitive motorsports (Example: monster trucks)

  • Ethical considerations: most fuel ethanol is fermented from crops that could otherwise be eaten, forcing up food prices

Oxidation of Alcohol

  • Most important reaction of the alcohols is oxidation

  • A range of compounds will oxidise them, so the oxidiser is often represented as [O]

  • One oxidising agent is K2Cr2O7 (potassium dichromate), (catalysts are acidic)

    • //need to know// When using this, orange Cr (VI) is reduced to green Cr (III) 

  • Tertiary alcohols do not oxidise

Examples:

  • Partial – C3H8O + [O]→ C3H6O + H2O

  • Complete – C3H8O + [O] → C3H6O2 + H2O

There are two steps that occur during the oxidation of alcohol: distillation and reflux. 

  • Distillation of a primary alcohol – will result in an aldehyde as the aldehyde has a lower boiling point than the associated carboxylic acid

  • Distillation of a secondary alcohol – will result in a ketone 

  • Reflux – the process where the aldehyde is not removed from the solution allowing the further oxidation of the aldehyde into a carboxylic acid 

Nucleophilic Substitution

  • One of the most important reactions undergone by halogenoalkanes

  • A nucleophile is attached to positive charges

    • They either have full negative charges or delta negative charges

    • H2O and OH- are both nucleophiles

  • The carbon in the carbon-halogen bond has a delta positive charge due to the greater electronegativity of the halogen 

    • Makes it susceptible to attack by nucleophiles

  • Carboxylic acid + alcohol → ester



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