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Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules.

Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

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Why can carbon form so many compounds? It can form up to 4 covalent bonds with other carbon atoms.

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Page 1: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Organic Chemistry

Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon

molecules.

Page 2: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Hydrocarbons

Compounds containing only carbon & hydrogen

Page 3: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Why can carbon form so many compounds?

It can form up to 4 covalent bonds with other carbon atoms.

Page 4: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

What is the maximum # of bonds between any 2 C

atoms?

A triple bond (3 pairs or 6 electrons)

Page 5: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Properties of hydrocarbon molecules

• Molecular• Low melting points• Low boiling points• Low Hf

• Low Hv

• High evaporation rate• High vapor pressure• May be gases,

liquids, or solids

• Decompose on heating• Poor conductors of

heat & electricity• Nonpolar (vdw forces)• Dissolve in nonpolar

solvents• React slowly• Solids may be soft or

brittle

Page 6: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of H?

1

Page 7: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of O?

2

Page 8: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of the halogens (F, Cl, Br, I)?

1

Page 9: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of S?

2

Page 10: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of N & P?

3

Page 11: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Bonding capacity of C?

4

Page 12: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

The 4 single bonds of a carbon atom are directed to

the corners of a regular tetrahedron.

Page 13: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Saturated hydrocarbon

Hydrocarbon containing only single carbon-

carbon bonds

Page 14: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Unsaturated hydrocarbon

Hydrocarbon containing at least 1 double or triple carbon-carbon

bond

Page 15: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Chemical or Molecular Formulas

Tell the kind & number of atoms in a

molecule.

Page 16: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Structural Formulas

Tell the kind & number of atoms in a molecule. Also

attempt to show approximate shapes & bonding patterns of

molecules.

Page 17: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Homologous Series

A group of related compounds in which each member differs from the one before it by the

same additional unit. Properties vary in a predictable

way.

Page 18: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Alkanes

•Homologous series of saturated hydrocarbons. with the general formula CnH2n+2.

• Ratio of C to H is n:2n+2

Page 19: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Alkanes

Release energy when burned: fuels.

Page 20: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Naming Alkanes

•Prefix: depends on # of carbon atoms in longest continuous chain.

•Suffix: ane

Page 21: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Properties of Alkanes

•Nonpolar.

•Boiling point as # of carbon atoms . (van der Waals forces increase with size).

•Insoluble in water. (Like dissolves like.)

Page 22: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Nonpolar

•The electron cloud of the molecule is fairly evenly distributed. Either:

–Molecule has atoms with similar electronegativities–Molecule has high symmetry

Page 23: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Isomers

•Molecules with the same chemical formula but different structural formulas.

•Different chemical & physical properties. Different names.•Same formula mass & percentage composition.

Page 24: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Isomers

•# of possible isomers as # of C atoms

Page 25: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Alkenes

Homologous series of unsaturated hydrocarbons

containing 1 double carbon-carbon bond.

Page 26: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

General formula of alkenes

CnH2n

Page 27: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Naming Alkenes

•Prefix: depends on # of carbon atoms in longest continuous chain.

•Suffix: ene

•# in front may give location of double bond.

Page 28: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Properties of Alkenes

Slightly more reactive than the alkanes. Double bond is site of reactivity.

Page 29: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Alkynes

Homologous series of unsaturated hydrocarbons containing 1 carbon-carbon triple bond.

Page 30: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

General formula of alkynes

CnH2n-2

Page 31: Organic Chemistry Branch of chemistry dealing with carbon molecules

Naming alkynes

•Prefix: depends on # of carbon atoms in longest continuous chain.

•Suffix: yne

•# in front gives location of triple bond.