Title: An Introduction to Organic Compounds
1An Introduction to Organic Compounds
- Nomenclature, Physical Properties, and
Representation of Structure
2Note from Dr. Maynes
- I found this PowerPoint on the web. It is very
comprehensive, and as far as I can see, correct. - However, it includes a lot of common names,
which I am NOT recommending you learn at this
point - Feel free to use this to enrich your study of
Organic Nomenclature
3Contents of Chapter 2
- Nomenclature
- Structures of Alkyl Halides, Alcohols, Ethers,
and Amines - Physical Properties
- Conformations of Alkanes
- Cycloalkanes
4Counting to Ten in Organic
- 01 meth Mother
- 02 eth Enjoys
- 03 prop Peanut
- 04 but BUTter
- 05 pent PENTagon
- 06 hex HEXagon or HEX nut
- 07 hept HEPTember (Roman sept is Greek hept)
- 08 oct OCTober
- 09 non NONember (Roman nov is Greek non)
- 10 dec DECember
5Alkanes
6Primary, Secondary, Tertiary
- A primary carbon has one other C directly bonded
to it. - A secondary carbon is directly bonded to two
other Cs. - A tertiary carbon is directly bonded to three
other Cs. - Multivalent atoms are 1º, 2º, or 3º by bonding to
Cs. - Univalent atom or group not really 1º, 2º, or 3º
on its own - ID depends on type of carbon it is
bonded to.
7Nomenclature of Alkyl Substituents
- There are four alkyl groups that contain four
carbons
8Nomenclature of Alkyl Substituents
- The prefix sec- occurs only in sec-butyl
9Nomenclature of Alkyl Substituents
- The prefix tert- can be used with butyl or pentyl
(also known as amyl) but not with hexyl
10IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- Determine longest continuous chain (i.e. parent
hydrocarbon) - Cite the name of substituent before the name of
the parent hydrocarbon along with the number of
the carbon to which it is attached
11IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- Number in the direction that gives the lower
number for the lowest-numbered substituent.
Substituents are listed in alphabetical order
neglecting prefixes such as di- tri- tert- etc.
12IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- When both directions yield the same lower number
for the lowest numbered substituent, select the
direction that yields the lower number for the
next lowest numbered substituent
13IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- If same substituent numbers are obtained in
either direction, number in direction giving
lowest number to the first named substituent
14IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- If compound has two or more chains of the same
length, parent hydrocarbon is chain with greatest
number of substituents
15IUPAC Systematic Nomenclature - Alkanes
- Names such as sec-butyl and tert-butyl are
acceptable, but systematic substituent names are
preferable - Numbering of the substituent begins with the
carbon attached to the parent hydrocarbon - This number together with the substituent name
is placed inside parentheses
16Nomenclature of Cycloalkanes
- Cycloalkanes generally are shown as skeletal
structures
17Nomenclature of Cycloalkanes
- Ring is the parent hydrocarbon unless the alkyl
substituent has more carbons in that case the
substituent becomes the parent hydrocarbon - If only one substituent, no need to give it a
number
18Nomenclature of Cycloalkanes
- If the ring has 2 substituents, list in
alphabetical order and give number 1 to first
named group
19Nomenclature of Cycloalkanes
- If there is more than one substituent, list in
alphabetical order one substituent is given the
position number 1 number either clockwise or
counterclockwise - lowest numbers
20Nomenclature of Alkyl Halides
- Common name - Name the alkyl group first,
followed by the name of the halogen expressed as
an -ide name
21Nomenclature of Alkyl Halides
- IUPAC name - The halogen is treated as a
substituent
22Nomenclature of Ethers
- Common name - Name(s) of alkyl group(s) listed
first followed by the word ether
23Nomenclature of Ethers
- IUPAC name - The smaller alkyl group is converted
to an alkoxy name and used as a substituent
24Nomenclature of Alcohols
- Common name - Name of the Alkyl group followed by
the word alcohol
25Nomenclature of Alcohols
- IUPAC name - The OH group is a site of reactivity
(a functional group) - Functional group is denoted by the suffix, ol
26IUPAC Nomenclature of Alcohols
- Parent Hydrocarbon is the longest continuous
chain that contains the OH - Number the chain in direction that gives
functional group the lowest number - If both a substituent and a functional group are
present, the functional group gets the lower
number
27IUPAC Nomenclature of Alcohols
- If the functional group gets the same number when
counted from both directions, use direction which
gives the substituent the lower number - If there is more than one substituent, cite
substituents in alphabetical order
28IUPAC Nomenclature of Alcohols
- System is summarized as Substituent Parent
Hydrocarbon Functional Group
29Nomenclature of Amines
- Common name - Name of the Alkyl group(s) (in
alphabetical order) followed by the syllable
amine - The whole name is a single word
methylamine methylpropylamine
30Nomenclature of Amines
- IUPAC name - The NH2 group is a site of
reactivity (a functional group) - Functional group is denoted by the suffix,
amine - Final e of longest alkane group replaced by
suffix amine
1-butanamine butan-1-amine
31IUPAC Nomenclature of Amines
- Find the longest chain bonded to the nitrogen
- Final e is replaced with amine
- Number the carbon to which nitrogen is bonded
- Number any substituents on the alkyl chain
- Use italicized N- for each additional
substituent(s) on the nitrogen
32Properties of Alkyl Halides, Alcohols, Ethers,
Amines
- For alkanes, there are only induced
dipole-induced dipole interactions (also known as
van der Waals forces or London forces) - van der Waals forces are a function of surface
area
33Induced Dipole-Induced Dipole Interactions
34Hydrogen Bonding Strong Dipole-Dipole
Interactions
35Dipole-dipole Interactions
- Particularly important for ethers vs. alkanes
- Ethers and alkyl halides have dipole moments, but
their intermolecular attractions are not as
strong as hydrogen bonds
36Comparative Boiling Points
37Solubility
- The more carbons that are present, the less
soluble an organic compound is in water
38Newman Projections
- A convenient way to describe conformation isomers
is to look at the molecule along the axis of the
bond of interest - A Newman projection is a graphical representation
of such a view
39Conformations of Alkanes Rotation About C-C
Single Bonds
40Chair Conformation of Cyclohexane
41Drawing Cyclohexane in the Chair Conformation
42Interconversion of Cyclohexane Conformations
- As a result of simultaneous rotation about all
C-C bonds, a chair conformation of cyclohexane
can interconvert to another chair conformation by
a ring-flip - In the process, equatorial bonds become axial and
vice versa
43Monosubstituted Cyclohexanes
- When there is one substituent on the cyclohexane
ring, the two chair conformations are no longer
equivalent
44Conformations of 1,4-Disubstituted Cyclohexanes
45Conformations of 1,4-Disubstituted Cyclohexanes
- The cis isomer must have one substituent in an
axial position and one in an equatorial position
46Conformations of 1,4-Disubstituted Cyclohexanes
- The trans isomer has both substituents in either
the equatorial or in the axial positions
47Conformations of cis-1,3-Disubstituted
Cyclohexanes
- A cis-1,3-disubstituted cyclohexane can exist in
one of two conformations
48Conformations of trans-1,3-Disubstituted
Cyclohexanes
- Both conformers of trans-1-tert-butyl-3-methylcycl
ohexane have one substituent in an axial position
and one in an equatorial position