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Organic chemistry

Organic Chemistry Lecture 7

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Chapter 7 ?2010, Prentice Hall Organic Chemistry, 7th Edition L. G. Wade, Jr. Structure and Synthesis of Alkenes Chapter 7 * Introduction Alkenes are hydrocarbon with carbon-carbon double bonds. Alkenes are also called olefins, meaning ?oil-forming gas?. The functional group of alkenes is the carbon-carbon double bond, which is reactive. Chapter 7 Chapter 7 * Sigma Bonds of Ethylene Chapter 7 Chapter 7 * Orbital Description Sigma bonds around the double-bonded carbon are sp2 hybridized. Angles are approximately 120? and the molecular geometry is trigonal planar. Unhybridized p orbitals with one electron will overlap forming the double bond (pi bond) . Chapter 7 Chapter 7 * Bond Lengths and Angles sp2 hybrid orbitals have more s character than the sp3 hybrid orbitals.

Organic Chemistry Lecture 6

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Chapter 6 Organic Chemistry, 7th Edition L. G. Wade, Jr. Alkyl Halides: Nucleophilic Substitution and Elimination ?2010, Prentice Hall Chapter 6 * Classes of Halides Alkyl halides: Halogen, X, is directly bonded to sp3 carbon. Vinyl halides: X is bonded to sp2 carbon of alkene. Aryl halides: X is bonded to sp2 carbon on benzene ring. C C H H H C l vinyl halide C H H H C H H B r alkyl halide I aryl halide Chapter 6 Chapter 6 * Polarity and Reactivity Halogens are more electronegative than C. Carbon?halogen bond is polar, so carbon has partial positive charge. Carbon can be attacked by a nucleophile. Halogen can leave with the electron pair. Chapter 6 Chapter 6 * IUPAC Nomenclature Name as haloalkane.

fonctions organiques

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Fonctions organiques Alcane Cyclalcane Alc?nes Aromatiques Benz?ne Alcyne Alcool Ether Thiol Thioalcool Thioether Phenol Amines Aniline Ald?hydes C?tones Enol Equilibre Ceto-Enol Aldol (Ald?hyd-Alcool) Acides carboxyliques Diacides C?toacides Anhydre Ester Thioester Acides amin?s Peptides Nitrile Amides
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Campbell Biology 9th Edition Chapter 4 Outline

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Chapter 4 Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life Outline Carbon: The Backbone of Life Organisms are made up of chemicals based mostly on carbon Carbon comes into the atmosphere through the action of plants: plants use solar energy to transform CO2 Carbon forms molecules that are large, complex, and varied Organic Chemistry is the Study of Carbon Compounds Organic Chemistry: The branch of chemistry that specializes in the study of carbon compounds Overall percentages of the major elements of life are quite uniform from one organism to the next Chemists learned to make many simple compounds in the lab by combining elements under the right conditions by the 1800s Vitalism: The belief in a life force outside the jurisdiction of physical and chemical laws

Chapter 4 Notes

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BIOL 1020 ? CHAPTER 4 LECTURE NOTES Chapter 4: Carbon and the molecular diversity of life Organic Compounds Organic compounds: any compound of carbon and another element or radical Inorganic: any compound that does not contain carbon. Carbon skeletons: the skeletal formula of an organic compound is a shorthand representation of its molecular structure Wide diversity in organic compounds Carbon has diverse bonding patterns. Carbon atomic structure How many valence electrons in a carbon atom? 4 How many covalent bonds can a carbon atom maximum form? 4 Bonding patterns Valence = 4 electrons Different molecular shape: chains, branches, ring, etc. Length difference. Hydrocarbons ? organic molecules consisting of only carbon and hydrogen e.g. propane

Organic chemistry

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Organic Chemistry Name: _______________________ organic chemistry: the study of carbon-containing compounds -- hydrocarbons: compounds containing only hydrogen and carbon alkanes: contain only single bonds alkenes (olefins): contain at least one C=C double bond alkynes: contain at least one carbon-carbon triple bond aromatic hydrocarbons: benzene-based -- structural isomers: compounds with the same molecular formula but different bonding arrangements e.g., C4H10 Organic Nomenclature Memorize the first ten prefixes. 1 = meth-, 2 = eth-, 3 = prop-, 4 = but-, 5 = pent-, 6 = hex-, 7 = hept-, 8 = oct-, 9 = non-, 10 = dec- NOTE: Hydrocarbon substituent groups use these prefixes and end in –yl. Naming Alkanes

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