Title: Introduction of Organic Chemistry
1 Introduction of Organic Chemistry
2Syllabus
- Introduction of Organic chemistry
- Classification
- Sources
- Types
- Functional Groups (Aldehydes,Ketone,Acids,Alccohol
s) - Application
3Chemistry
- Chemistry is the study of the substances,
specially their structure, properties,
transformations and the energy changes
accompanying these transformation.
4 Branches
- Organic Chemistry
- Inorganic Chemistry
- Physical Chemistry
5Discipline Branches of Chemistry
- Analytical Chemistry
- Industrial Chemistry
- Instrumental Chemistry
- Agriculture Chemistry
- Medicinal Chemistry
6Organic Chemistry
- The study of Carbon Compounds or better to say
the chemistry of hydrocarbons and their
derivatives.
7ATOMIC STRUCTURE
- Atom Smallest indivisible particle of an element
- Molecule Smallest particle of matter
8Types of Bonding
- Ionic bonding
- electron is fully transferred from metal to
non-metal - binding is by electrostatic attraction.
9Ionic Bonding
Sodium Atom
Fluorine Atom
10Ionic Bonding (2)
Sodium ion
Fluoride ion
Attraction between the two ions is electrostatic
-- Ionic Bond
11A SIMPLE COVALENT BOND
A pair of electrons is shared between the two
bonded atoms.
12A SIMPLE COVALENT BOND
Bonded pair
H
H
13A LEWIS DIAGRAM
..
(note use of lines for bonds)
H
O
H
..
COVALENT BONDS
CONSTRUCTED FROM LEWIS DOT SYMBOLS
..
.
.
.
.
H O H
..
14DRAWING CONVENTIONS
1. A shared pair (bond) is drawn as a line.
C O
2. An unshared pair is shown as a pair of dots.
N
3. The diagram includes formal charges (later).
..
H O H
H
15Bonding patterns
- Carbon 4 bonds
- Nitrogen (phosphorus) 3 bonds
- Oxygen (sulfur) 2 bonds
- Halogen (F, Cl, Br, I) 1 bond
- Hydrogen 1 bond
16Normal bonding patterns
17Common Bonding Patterns -- Cations
18Common Bonding Patterns -- Anions
19Types of Carbons
- Primary (1) attached to only one other carbon
- Secondary (2) attached to two other carbons
- Tertiary (3) attached to three other carbons
- Quaternary (4) attached to four other carbons
20Hydrocarbons
- Aliphatic
- alkanes contain only single bonds (saturated)
- alkenes contain at least one double bond
- (unsaturated)
- alkynes contain at least one triple bond
- Aromatic
- contain a benzene ring
21Hydrocarbons
- Alkanes contain only single (? ) bonds and have
the generic molecular formula CnH2n2 - Alkenes also contain double (? ?) bonds and
have the generic molecular formula CnH2n - Alkynes contain triple (? 2?) bonds and have
the generic molecular formula CnH2n-2 - Aromatics are planar, ring structures with
alternating single and double bonds eg. C6H6
22Types of Hydrocarbons
Each C atom is tetrahedral with sp3 hybridized
orbitals. They only have single bonds.
Each C atom is trigonal planar with sp2
hybridized orbitals. There is no rotation about
the CC bond in alkenes.
23Types of Hydrocarbons
Each C atom is linear with sp hybridized orbitals.
Each C--C bond is the same length shorter than a
C-C bond longer than a CC bond. The concept of
resonance is used to explain this phenomena.
24Alkanes
- 1 meth methane CH4
- 2 eth ethane C2H6
- 3 prop propane C3H8
- 4 but butane C4H10
- 5 pent pentane C5H12
- 6 hex hexane C6H14
- 7 hept heptane C7H16
- 8 oct octane C8H18
- 9 non nonane C9H20
- 10 dec decane C10H22
25Naming Alkanes C1 - C10 the number of C atoms
present in the chain.
- - - -
Each member C3 - C10 differs by one CH2 unit.
This is called a homologous series. Methane to
butane are gases at normal pressures. Pentane to
decane are liquids at normal pressures.
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27 Nomenclature of Alkyl Substituents
28 29Constitutional Isomers
- Substances which have the same molecular formula
but a different structural formula. - Isomers differ in connectivity.
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31- A compound can have more than one name, but a
- name must unambiguously specify only one
compound
A C7H16 compound can be any one of the following
32Functional Groups
- An atom or group of atoms which makes an organic
compound reactive and decides its functions
(properties) is called a Functional group. - In an organic compound, the alkyl group
determines the physical properties whereas the
functional group determines the chemical
properties of the compound. - A Functional group can be introduced by
displacing hydrogen of the hydrocarbon. - The functional groups are directly attached to
the carbon of the organic compound.
33- The basic structure of testosterone (male
hormone) and estradiol (female hormone) is
identical. - Both are steroids with four fused carbon rings,
but they differ in the functional groups attached
to the rings. - These then interact with different targets in the
body.
34- 6 functional groups, all hydrophilic
- In a hydroxyl group (-OH), a hydrogen atom forms
a polar covalent bond with an oxygen which forms
a polar covalent bond to the carbon skeleton. - Because of these polar covalent bonds hydroxyl
groups improve the water solubility of organic
molecules. - Organic compounds with hydroxyl groups are
alcohols and their names typically end in -ol.
35- A carbonyl group (-CO) consists of an oxygen atom
joined to the carbon skeleton by a double bond. - If the carbonyl group is on the end of the
skeleton, the compound is an aldelhyde. - If not, then the compound is a ketone.
- Isomers with aldehydes versus ketones have
different properties.
36- A carboxyl group (-COOH) consists of a carbon
atom with a double bond with an oxygen atom and a
single bond to a hydroxyl group. - Compounds with carboxyl groups are carboxylic
acids. - A carboxyl group acts as an acid because the
combined electro-negativities of the two adjacent
oxygen atoms increase the dissociation of
hydrogen as an ion (H).
37- An amino group (-NH2) consists of a nitrogen atom
attached to two hydrogen atoms and the carbon
skeleton. - Organic compounds with amino groups are amines.
- The amino group acts as a base because amino
groups can pick up a hydrogen ion (H) from the
solution. - Amino acids, the building blocks of proteins,
have amino and carboxyl groups.
38- A sulfhydryl group (-SH) consists of a sulfur
atom bonded to a hydrogen atom and to the
backbone. - This group resembles a hydroxyl group in shape.
- Organic molecules with sulfhydryl groups are
thiols. - Sulfhydryl groups help stabilize the structure of
proteins.
39- A phosphate group (-OPO32-) consists of
phosphorus bound to four oxygen atoms (three with
single bonds and one with a double bond). - A phosphate group connects to the carbon backbone
via one of its oxygen atoms. - Phosphate groups are anions with two negative
charges as two hydrogens have dissociated from
the oxygen atoms. - One function of phosphate groups is to transfer
energy between organic molecules.
40Functional Groups
41Functional Groups
42Classes of Organic Compounds
43ALCOHOL FUNCTIONAL GROUP
44Classification
- Monohydric Alcohols
- Polyhydric Alcohols
- - Dihydric Alcohols (Ethylene Glycol)
- - Trihydric Alcohols (Glycerol)
45Monohydric Alcohols
- Devided in Primary, Secondary and tertiary
alcohols. - CH3OH, CH3CH2OH
- Methanol Ethanol
- CH3CH(OH)CH3
- Isopropyl Alcohol
- CH3C(OH)(CH3)
- t-Butyl Alcohol
46Physical Properties
- Lower are colorless, neutral substances with
characteristic sweet alcoholic smell and burning
taste. Higher are waxy solids. - Lower are readily soluble in water organic
solvents but it decreases as M.W. increases. - B.P. are higher than corresponding alkanes. e.g.
Methanol-338 K and Methane-112K
47Preparation of Alcohol
- By Hydrolysis
- R-X NaOH? R-OH NaX
- By Hydration
- CH2CH2 ? CH3CH2OH
- Hydrolysis of Esters
- CH3COOC2H5 ? CH3COOH C2H5OH
- Reduction of Aldehyde/Ketone
- CHO/CO ? 1-Alcohol/2-alcohol
- Grignard Reagent
- R-Mg-X ?R-O-MgX ?R-OH
48Chemical properties
- Displacement of OH gr. By Halogen(X)
- R-OH HX ? RX H2O
- Action of Alkali Metals
- 2ROH 2Na ? 2RONa H2
- Dehydration
- C2H5OH ? CH2CH2 H2O
- Oxidation of Alcohol(K2Cr2O7/H2SO4)
- 1-alcohol ? Aldehyde ? Acid
- Reduction of Alcohols(Red P )
- C2H5OH 2HI ? CH3CH3H2O I2
49METHANOL
50ETHANOL
51ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL
52Ethylene glycol
53GLYCEROL
54Carbonyl Compounds
- If an oxygen atom is attached to carbon by a
double bond - the functional group CO is called carbonyl
group.
55ALDEHYDE
56Physical Properties
- Formaldehyde is a gas at room temp. All other
members are colorless liquids at ordinary temp.
The higher members are solids. - Lower aldehydes have unpleasant smell but as one
goes up in the series the smell becomes more
fruity. Ketones are generally pleasant smelling
liquids. - Solubilities
- Lower members are highly soluble in water.
Solubilities decreases with increasing molecular
mass. - B.P. are higher than those of non polar alkanes.
- B.P. of aldehydes/Ketones are lower than the B.P.
of alcohols.
57Chemical Properties
- Addition Across CO bond
- CH3CHO HCN CH3CH(CN)OH
CH3CH(OH)COOH - Acetaldehyde
Cyanohydrins 2-hydroxy
propanoicAcid - - Addition of Grignard Reagent
- HCHO CH3MgBr HCH(OMgBr)CH3
CH3CH2OH Mg(OH)Br - With Hydroxyl Amine
- CH3CHO H2NOH
CH3CHN-OH H2O - With Hydrazine (Phenyl Hydrazine)
- CH3CHO H2NNH2
CH3CHNNH2 H2O - Oxidation
- CH3CHO
CH3COOH - Reduction (Pt / Ni)
- CH3CHO H2
CH3CH2OH
58FORMALDEHYDE
59BENZALDEHYDE
60Ketones
61ACETONE
62CARBOXYLIC ACID
63Physical Properties
- The first nine mono carboxylic acids are
colorless liquids, while the higher ones are
colorless wax like solids. - Solubility The first four (formic, acetic,
propeonic, butiric) are soluble while fifth
(valeric) is slightly soluble and acids above six
carbon are insoluble in water. - B.P. M.P. They have abnormally high b.p., even
higher than those of alcohols of similar
molecular weights.
64Chemical Properties
- Reaction with alkalies
- R-COOH NaOH R-COONa H2O
- Decarboxylation
- CH3COOH NaOH soda lime CH3COONa H2O
- CH3COONa NaOH sodalime CH4 Na2CO3
- Reduction
- R-COOH LiAlH4/ 2H2 R-CH2OH
- Reaction with Carbonates
- R-COOH Na2CO3 R-COONa
H2O CO2 - Dehydration
- 2R-COOH R-COOCOCH3 H2O
-
Acid Anhydride
65FORMIC ACID
66ACETIC ACID
67BENZOIC ACID
68ESTERS
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73ETHER
74DIETHYL ETHER
75TERT-BUTYL ETHER
76ETHYLENE OXIDE
77AMINES
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