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Organic Nomenclature. Organic Compounds. Organic Compounds - any covalently bonded compound containing carbon (except carbonates and oxides). Organic Compounds. Contain carbon Have covalent bonds Have low melting points Have low boiling points Burn in air (oxygen)
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Organic Compounds • Organic Compounds - any covalently bonded compound containing carbon (except carbonates and oxides)
Organic Compounds • Contain carbon • Have covalent bonds • Have low melting points • Have low boiling points • Burn in air (oxygen) • Are soluble in nonpolar solvents • Form large molecules
General Characteristics of Organic Molecules • Organic molecules exhibit three different types of hybridization at the carbon center: • sp3 hybridized carbons for tetrahedral geometries; • sp2hybridized carbons for trigonal planar geometries; and • sp hybridized carbons for linear geometries.
Stabilities of Organic Molecules • Carbon forms very strong bonds between H, O, N, and halogens. • Carbon also forms strong bonds with itself. • Therefore, C can form stable long chain or ring structures. • Bond strength increases from single to double to triple bond. • Bond length decreases in the same direction.
Hydrocarbons • Hydrocarbons- Organic compounds that contain only carbon & hydrogen • Alkanes- contain only single covalent bonds • Alkenes- contain one or more carbon - carbon double bond • Alkynes- contain one or more carbon-carbon triple bond
Saturated & Unsaturated Hydrocarbons • Saturated hydrocarbons – contain only single carbon-carbon bonds (alkanes) • Unsaturated hydrocarbons – contain double carbon-carbon bonds (alkenes) or triple carbon-carbon (alkynes) bonds
Formulas • Alkanes = CnH2n+2 • Alkenes = CnH2n • Alkynes = CnH2n-2
Nomenclature • Must memorize prefixes • To name, look at the formula for the hydrocarbon • Determine if it is an alkane, alkene, or alkyne • Use the prefix for the number of carbons • Add ending (ane, ene, yne)
Example • Name C3H8 • This falls under the equation CnH2n+2 • Therefore it is an alkane • Since n=3 we will use the prefix prop • Since it is an alkane we will use the ending ane • propane
Alkanes • Contain C and H only • Contain single bonds C-C • Have 4 bonds to every carbon (C) atom • Are nonpolar
Complete Structural Formulas Show the bonds between each of the atoms H H H C H H C H H H CH4 , methane
Drawing structures: it’s all good 2-butene On a test, choose a method that shows all Hs This is called the “condensed structure” CH3CH=CHCH3 Using brackets can also shorten some formulas: CH3(CH2)4CH3 vs. CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3
More Alkanes H H Condensed Structural Formulas H C C H CH3 CH3 H H Ethane H H H H C C C H CH3 CH2 CH3 H H H Propane
IUPAC Names Name # carbons Structural Formula Methane 1 CH4 Ethane 2 CH3CH3 Propane 3 CH3CH2CH3 Butane 4 CH3CH2CH2CH3 Pentane 5 CH3CH2CH2CH2CH3
Formic acid Acetone Acetylene Naming: common vs. IUPAC • Common names used in the 1800’s are still used for some compounds today: • The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) was established in 1900s • Frequent revisions to nomenclature • Systematic method allows an infinite number of compounds to be named given a few rules
IUPAC NAMES Name # carbons Structural Formula Hexane 6 CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 Heptane 7 CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 Octane 8 CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 Nonane 9 CH3 CH2 CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 Decane 10 CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3
Learning Check Alk1 A. What is the condensed formula for H H H H H C C C C H H H H H B. What is its molecular formula? C. What is its name?
Solution Alk1 A. CH3CH2CH2CH3 B. C4H10 C. butane
Example • Name C5H12 • 5 carbons = pent • CnH2n+2 = alkane (ane) • pentane
Alkenes and Alkynes • Alkenes are hydrocarbons with at least one double carbon to carbon bond. • To show the presence of the double bond, the –ane suffix from the alkane name is changed to –ene. • The alkenes are unsaturated with respect to hydrogen • This means it does not have the maximum number of hydrogen atoms as it would if it were an alkane (a saturated hydrocarbon).
Naming is similar to naming alkanes except: • The longest continuous chain must contain the double bond. • The base name now ends in –ene. • The carbons are numbered so as to keep the number for the double bond as low as possible. • The base name is given a number which identifies the location of the double bond. • An alkyne is a hydrocarbon with at least one carbon to carbon triple bond. • Naming an alkyne is similar to the alkenes, except the base name ends in –yne.
Alkenes • Carbon-carbon double bonds • Names end in -ene H2C=CH2 ethene (ethylene) H2C=CH-CH3 propene (propylene) cyclohexene
Alkynes • Carbon-carbon triple bonds • Names end in -yne HCCH ethyne(acetylene) HCC-CH3 propyne
Naming Alkenes and Alkynes When the carbon chain has 4 or more C atoms, number the chain to give the lowest number to the double or triple bond. 1 2 3 4 CH2=CHCH2CH3 1-butene CH3CH=CHCH3 2-butene CH3CHCHCH3 2-butyne
C2H4 Numbering carbons 1-pentene Q- draw pentene A- Where’s the bond? We number C atoms • Thus, naming compounds with multiple bonds is more complex than previously indicated • Only if 2+ possibilities exist, are #s needed • Always give double bond the lowest number • Q - Name these 2-butene Ethene 3-nonyne
CH3CH2CH2CH=C=CH2 Multiple multiple bonds 2,3-heptadiene • Give 1st bond (1st point of difference) lowest # • include di, tri, tetra, penta, etc. before ene/yne • Comma between #s, hyphen between #-letter • You do not need to know ene + yne 2,4,6-nonatriyne 2-butyne 1,2,4-pentatriene 1,2-hexadiene
Cyclic structures • Cyclic structures are circular • Have “cyclo” in name • Benzene is not a cyclic structure • cyclopentane Q- Draw these (note: carbons in a double bond should be consecutive- 1 and 2, 5 and 6, etc.): cyclobutene 1,3-cyclopentadiene cyclopropane
C H 3 H C C H 3 3 C H 3 Naming side chains • Names are made up of: side chains, root • 2,3-dimethylpentane • Root is the longest possible HC chain • Must contain multiple bonds if present • Add -yl to get name of side chain • Common side chains include: • CH3- methyl CH3CH2- ethyl • CH3CH2CH2- propyl (CH3)2CH- isopropyl • “iso” (branched) is not an IUPAC convention • Br- (bromo), Cl- (chloro), F- (fluoro), I- (iodo)
Naming side chains Example: use the rules on the bottom of handout to name the following structure Rule 1: choose the correct ending ene
Naming side chains Rule 2: longest carbon chain ene
Naming side chains Rule 3: attach prefix (according to # of C) 1-hexene ene
Naming side chains Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon 1-hexene
Naming side chains Rule 4: Assign numbers to each carbon 1-hexene 1-hexene
Naming side chains ethyl methyl methyl Rule 5: Determine name for side chains 1-hexene 1-hexene
Naming side chains ethyl methyl methyl Rule 6: attach name of branches 2-ethyl-4,4-dimethyl-1-hexene
Learning Check HA3 Write the IUPAC name for each of the following unsaturated compounds: A. CH3CH2CCCH3 CH3 B. CH3C=CHCH3 C.
Solutions HA3 Write the IUPAC name for each of the following unsaturated compounds: A. CH3CH2CH=CHCH3 2-pentyne CH3 B. CH3C=CHCH3 C. 2-methyl-2-butene 3-methylcyclopentene
Alkyl Groups Branches on carbon chains H H C CH3 methyl H H H H C C CH3CH2 ethyl H H
Branched Alkanes CH3 CH3CHCH3 methyl groups CH3 CH3 CH3CHCH2CHCH3
Naming Branched Alkanes CH3 methyl branch CH3CH2CH2CHCH2CH3 6 5 4 3 2 1 Count
Naming Branched Alkanes CH3 methyl branch CH3CH2CH2CHCH2CH3 6 5 4 3 2 1 Count 3-Methylhexane on third C CH3 six carbon chain group
IUPAC • Carbon chains need to be numbered in order to designate the carbon atom that the substituted group is added. • Follow these guidelines: • Find the longest continuous carbon chain • Number the chain so the substituent's have the lowest possible number. • Give priority to the multiple bonds.
Numbering priority • 1. functional groups • 2. double and triple bonds • 3. substituents
Once all groups have been numbered, place them in alphabetical order in the final compounds name. • Numbers are separated by commas • Names and numbers are separated by dashes. • Use mathematical prefixes for multiple substituent's.
Ex: • CH3CH2CHClCH2CH=CHCHBrCH3 • 2-bromo-6-chloro-3-octene
Learning Check Alk4 A. CH3CH3 CH3CHCH2CHCH3 B. CH3 CH3 CH3CH2CHCH2CCH2CH3 CH3
Solution Alk4 A. CH3CH3 CH3CHCH2CHCH3 2,4-dimethylpentane B. CH3 CH3 CH3CH2CHCH2CCH2CH3 CH3 3,3,5-trimethylheptane
Learning Check Alk5 Write a condensed structure for A. 3,4-dimethylheptane B. 2,2-dimethyloctane
Solution Alk5 A. 3,4-dimethylheptane CH3 CH3CH2CHCHCH2CH2CH3 CH3 • 2,2-dimethyloctane CH3 CH3CCH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 CH3