Chapter 8 - Introduction to Organic Chemistry Flashcards

1
Q

What is an alkyl group?

A

It is a substituent group derived from an alkane by removal of a hydrogen atom.

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2
Q

What is an aryl group?

A

A functional group that is derived from an aromatic ring by the removal of a hydrogen atom.

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3
Q

What is a substituent group?

A

An atom or group of atoms substituted in place of a hydrogen on the hydrocarbon chain.

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4
Q

How are organic compounds classified into classes?

A

Depending on how many substituent groups (usually alkyl) are joined to the carbon atom which is functional group is attached to/nitrogen in the case of amines.
Primary (1^0), Secondary (2^0), Tertiary (3^0), Quarternary (4^0)

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5
Q

Define homologous series.

A

It is a family of compounds containing the same functional group, and in which each successive member increases by one -CH2- unit.

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6
Q

What are 4 properties of compounds in the same homologous series?

A

1) can be represented by the same general molecular formula
2) can usually be prepared by similar methods
3) shows a gradual change in physical properties as molar mass increases
4) have similar chemical properties

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7
Q

What are aliphatic compounds? (3)

A
  • compounds with open chains of carbon atoms (eg propane)
  • may be unbranched or branched
  • may contain single, double or triple bonds, or a combination of these
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8
Q

What are alicyclic compounds?

A

Compounds with closed rings of carbon atoms

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9
Q

What are aromatic compounds?

A

Compounds containing at least one aromatic system

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10
Q

What are the 7 types of organic reactions?

A

1) addition
2) elimination
3) substitution
4) condensation
5) hydrolysis
6) oxidation
7) reduction

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11
Q

What is addition?

A

it is when two substances react together to form a single product. The pi bond of the unsaturated functional group (usually present in one of the reactants) breaks to form 2 sigma bonds.

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12
Q

What is elimination? (2) (opposite of addition)

A

it is when an alkene is formed by the removal of

  • a molecule of H2O from a molecule of an alcohol, or
  • a molecule of HX from a molecule of a halogenalkane
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13
Q

What is substitution?

A

it is when one atom or group of atoms is substituted by another. There is also at least 2 products.

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14
Q

What is condensation?

A

It is when 2 molecules come together to form a bigger molecule, with the elimination of a small molecule such as water or HCl. (not the same as elimination)

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15
Q

What is hydrolysis?

A

A reaction in which a molecule is split into two by the action of water, often catalysed by dilute acids or dilute alkalis.

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16
Q

What is oxidation [O]? (2)

A

A reaction in which

  • oxygen is added to a molecule, or
  • hydrogen is removed from a molecule
17
Q

What is reduction [H]? (2)

A

A reaction in which

  • oxygen is remove from a molecule, or
  • hydrogen is added to the a molecule
18
Q

What is heterolytic bond breaking (heterolytic fission)?

A

It is the splitting of a bond resulting in unequal sharing of the bonding electrons to each resulting fragment. It usually results in the formation of ions.

19
Q

What is heterolytic bond forming?

A

A reaction where electrons move in such a way as to create new bonds.

20
Q

What are electrophiles?

A

An electrophile is an electron-deficient species that accepts an electron pair from an electron-rich species in s reaction to form a new covalent bond. They possess either

  • a positively charged centre, or
  • an atom which can carry an induced/permanent partial positive charge “d+”.
21
Q

What are nucleophiles?

A

A nucleophile is a species that donates an electron pair to an electron-deficient species in a reaction to form a new covalent bond. They possess that electrons that can be shared (e.g. pi bond or lone pairs of electrons)

22
Q

What are polar mechanisms in organic reactions?

A

Bond breaking and forming processes are heterolytic - involving movement of electron pairs

23
Q

What are non-polar mechanisms in organic reactions?

A

Bond breaking and forming process are homolytic - involving movement of single electrons rather than electron pairs

24
Q

What is homolytic bond breaking (homolytic fission)?

A

It is the splitting of a single bond, giving an equal share of bonding electrons to each resulting particle. It results in the formation of radicals.

25
Q

What is the difference between an intermediate and transition state for reaction intermediates?

A

Intermediate: definite species that exists for a finite length of time; can be isolated
Transition state: hypothetical species that exists only during the time that reactants are in contact with each other (~10^-15seconds), and thus cannot be isolated.

26
Q

What are the three species that are reaction intermediates?

A

1) free radicals
2) carbocations (carbonium ion)
3) carbanions

27
Q

What are carbocations (carbonium ions)?

A

It is a species that contains a carbon atom bearing a positive charge . It is electron deficient and a strong electrophile.

  • positively charged carbon atom is bonded to 3 other atoms
  • has only 6 electrons in its valence shell
  • no lone pairs
28
Q

What are carbanions?

A

It is a species that contains a carbon atom bearing bearing a negative charge. It is electron-rich and a strong nucleophile.

  • negatively charged carbon atom is bonded to three other atoms
  • has 8 electrons in its valence shell (3 bonds and one lone pair)
29
Q

What are 2 types of electronic effects? (effects that influence the distribution of electrons in a particular chemical species, hence the reactivity of the species itself)

A

1) inductive effect (polarisation)

2) resonance (delocalisation)

30
Q

What is the inductive effect (polarisation)?

A

It is the polarisation of electron density in a bond due to the electronegativity of nearby atoms.

31
Q

What 5 characteristics of the inductive effect?

A

1) is a permanent but weak effect
2) can be electron-donating or electron-withdrawing
3) occurs through sigma bonds
4) is distance dependent (can extend to 2~3 bonds away but becomes weaker the further you get from the influencing functional group)
5) as long as electronegative atoms are present, there is inductive effect

32
Q

What is resonance (delocalisation)?

A

Resonance occurs when pi electrons are allowed to flow through the overlap of neighbouring p orbitals. Such electrons are said to be delocalized.

33
Q

What are 5 characteristics of the influence of resonance?

A

1) it is a permanent effect
2) can be electron-donating or electron-withdrawing
3) occurs through pi-system, which must be in a plane
4) independent of distance
5) minimum of 3 atoms that must have continuous, sideway overlaps of p orbitals (can be distributed in a region of space)

34
Q

What are steric effects?

A

Effects that result from the number and size of substituents and the repulsion between them are called steric effects.

35
Q

What is steric hindrance and what is its effect?

A

It is when the steric effect hinders the rate and extent of a reaction. A hindered, bulky reactant could prevent easy approach of the other reactant due to the repulsion of the electron clouds of both species, making bond formation difficult.

36
Q

What is a distinguishing test?

A

It is a simple chemical test that aims to confirm the presence of a particular compound or differentiate between organic compounds, through the identification of certain key functional groups. Such tests require a detectable chemical change with minimal use of complicated set-up or equipment.