1 / 16

Organic vs. Inorganic Compounds

Organic vs. Inorganic Compounds. Another way of classifying chemical compounds… . Organic Compounds. In science, organic compounds contain carbon ( C ), and usually hydrogen ( H ) Sometimes other types of atoms are also attached, including: oxygen , halogens , and nitrogen.

aideen
Download Presentation

Organic vs. Inorganic Compounds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Organic vs. Inorganic Compounds Another way of classifying chemical compounds…

  2. Organic Compounds In science, organic compounds contain carbon (C), and usually hydrogen (H) Sometimes other types of atoms are also attached, including: oxygen, halogens, and nitrogen

  3. Is that why foods are called“organic”? • Organic actually derives from “coming from life”, because the compounds that plants and animals make are all C-compounds • This is not the meaning of organic foods though! • In this case organic refer to being produced without chemicals (ironically many of these chemicals are actually ORGANIC compounds!)

  4. Inorganic Compounds Inorganic compounds do not contain carbon with three exceptions: Carbon Monoxide and Carbon Dioxide Compounds containing cyanide (CN-) and carbonate (CO3-) ions Acids containing C—these can be identified because H is written before the C!

  5. Why are organic compounds so special? • Carbon has four electrons in its valence shell, which allows for more chemical bonding possibilities than any other element. • Long chains of carbons form petroleum and plastics • Some cyclic (“circular”) rings of carbons form pesticides The acetaminophen molecule: the active ingredient in Tylenol

  6. Hydrocarbons • A hydrocarbon is an organic compound that contains only carbon and hydrogen. • Hydrocarbons are based on a carbon “backbone”, or chain, with hydrogen atoms added on the sides

  7. You know about hydrocarbons already! • The simplest hydrocarbons are ones that you might recognize and have even used! • Methane (CH4)--- main component of natural gas • Ethane (C2H6)--- also found in natural gas • Propane (C3H8) --- used as a fuel for BBQs • Butane (C4H10) --- an extremely flammable fluid used in industrial torches • Octane (C8H18)---a combustible liquid in gasoline • All hydrocarbons are flammable, and most are liquids are room temperature

  8. Alcohols are hydrocarbons too… • Alcohols are organic compounds with C, H and O. • The simplest alcohols are: • Methanol (CH4O)--- used in labs as a solvent but causes blindness! • Ethanol (C2H6O)---is a psychoactive drug (present in alcohol), but is now being considered as a fuel source • Isopropyl alcohol (C3H8O)---rubbing alcohol used to sterile cuts • Alcohols are generally very flammable

  9. ORGANIC OR NOT??? DNA ORGANIC---DNA is has a sugar backbone, which consists of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen

  10. ORGANIC OR NOT??? Vegetable Oil ORGANIC--- oils and fats are long-chain carbon compounds, which are used by living things as a way of storing energy

  11. ORGANIC OR NOT??? Sulphuric Acid NOT! Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) is the strong acid found in car batteries, but doesn’t contain carbon and isn’t organic

  12. ORGANIC OR NOT??? Corn starch ORGANIC! Starch is produced by plants as a way of storing sugars that they don’t need right away

  13. ORGANIC OR NOT??? Copper (II) Sulphate NOT! Copper (II) sulphate is a beautiful blue crystal, but does not contain carbon and is definitely not organic!

  14. Three different representations: • Structural formula- lists the elements and their proportions in the order they are bonded MethaneCH4 MethanolCH3OH Acetic Acid (Vinegar) CH3COOH

  15. Three different representations: • Ball-and-stick model- each element is given a different colour and/or size and the picture shows how many and how the elements are bonded Each black ball represent C… Each white ball represents H… The red ball represents O… This is Ethanol! (alcohol group -0H)

  16. Three different representations: • Space-filling model- similar to a ball-and-stick model, but an animated model that shows how elements are connected Methylisocyanate- a valuable synthetic component for biology CH3N=C=S Heme- the iron-containing component of hemoglobin, C34H32FeN4O4

More Related