TOPIC 18 - Organic chemistry III Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to the 4 valent electrons in the carbon atoms in benzene?

A
  • 2 of them are in two C-C bond.
  • 1 is bonded to H
  • 1 p-orbital electron is part of the delocalised ring of electron.
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2
Q

What is the length of the C-C double bond? Why?

A

139 pm.

It is between length of single C-C bond (154pm) and the length of double C=C (134pm) because the delocalised ring of electron increases the strength of the C-C bond slightly, without reaching the strength of the C=C.

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3
Q

Why do we know that benzene is more stable than cyclohexa-1,3,5-ene?

A
  • Enthalpy of hydrogenation of cylohexene (1 C=C) = -120kJ/mol.
  • Expected enthalpy of hydrogenation of benzene = enthalpy hydrogenation of cyclohexa-1,3,5-ene.
  • Actual experimental value: -208kJ/mol.
  • So more energy is required to break the bonds in benzene than in cyclohexa-1,3,5-ene. Therefore benzene is more stable.
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4
Q

What is the main reason why benzene is so stable?

A

The delocalised ring of electrons.

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5
Q

What is the equation for the complete combustion of benzene?

A
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6
Q

Does benzene usually burn completely?

A

No. A lot of soot is produced and a black smoky flame is observed.

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7
Q

Does benzene undergo electrophilic addition reactions easily? (like the bromination of alkenes)

Why?

What recations to they undego instead?

A

No. Benzene is stable and so doesn’t undergo these types of reaction since it would sirupt the stable ring of electrons.

Instead, they undergo electrophilic substitution, where a hydroger or functional group is substituted by the electrophile.

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8
Q

What are aromatic compounds (arenes)

A
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9
Q

What is the name of this molecule?

A
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10
Q

What is the name of this molecule?

A
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11
Q

What is the name of this molecule?

A
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12
Q

What is the name of this molecule?

A
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13
Q

What is the name of this molecule?

A
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14
Q

What is the generic mechanism for the electrophilic substitution with benzene?

A
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15
Q

Why are halogen carrier catalysts used in the electrophilic substitution of benzene?

A
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16
Q

What is the mechanism + conditions for Friedel Craft’s acylation?

A
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17
Q

Mechanism+conditions for friedel crafts alkylation?

A
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18
Q

Mechanism for addition of alcohol to a benzene ring using Friedel Crafts alkylation?

A
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19
Q

What is the mechanism for the nitration of benzene?

A
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20
Q

Below which temperature is a single NO2 substitution ensured in the nitration of benzene?

A
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21
Q

What is the general rule for numbering other groups in a phenol molecule?

A
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22
Q

Why are electrophilic substitution reactions more likely to occur in phenol than in benzene?

A
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23
Q

What is the equation of ethanoic anhydride and salicylic acid to give aspirin?

A
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24
Q

Why is ethanoic anhydride used in the synthesis of aspirin instead of ethanoyl chloride?

A
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25
Q

Are phenols acidic?

A

Yes. They are weak acids. They dissociate weakly to from a phenoxide ion and a H+ ion.

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26
Q

What is the equation for the reaction between phenol and NaOH?

A
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27
Q

What is the equation for the reaction between phenol and bromine water?

A
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28
Q

Which two isomers can be produced in the reaction of phenol with bromine water?

A
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29
Q

What are aliphatic amines?

A
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30
Q

How are aliphatic amines made by reacting a halogenoalkane with excess ammonia?

A
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31
Q

What is the downside of making aliphatic amines by reacting halogenoalkanes + excess ammonia?

A
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32
Q

What is the equation for making aliphatic amines using nickel catalyst and hydrogen to reduce nitriles?

A
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33
Q

What is the equation+conditions for making aliphatic amines using a strong reducing agent (LiALH4) and dilute acid?

A
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34
Q

What are the conditions+equation for aromatic amines?

A
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35
Q

What are the orders in the strength of the base in ammonia, primary aliphatic amines and aromatic amines?

A
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36
Q

Why are primary aliphatic amines more basic than NH3, and NH3 more basic than aromatic amines?

A
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37
Q

Can Amines hydrogen bond with water? How?

A
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38
Q

Are amines soluble in water? Why?

A
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39
Q

What happens when we react a small amount of butylamine with copper sulfate? What happens when the butylamine is in excess?

A
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40
Q

What is the equation for the reaction between ethanoyl chloride and butylamine?

A
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41
Q

What is different in the neutralisation recations of amines and acids from traditional acid-base reactions?

A
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42
Q

What is the equation for the reaction of butylamine with HCl?

A
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43
Q

What is the equation that shows how amines form an alkaline solution in water?

A
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44
Q

What are amides?

A
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45
Q

What are N-substituted amides?

A
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46
Q

What is the equation of ethanoyl chloride and ammonia?

A
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47
Q

What is the equation for the reaction between ethanoyl chloride and primary amines?

A
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48
Q

How are polyamides formed? Include equation.

A
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49
Q

What is the equation for the reaction that gives the polyamide Kevlar?

A
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50
Q

What is the equation to give the polyamide Nylon 6,6?

A
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51
Q

How are polyesters made? Give general equation.

A
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52
Q

What is the equation for the reaction that makes 1 repeating unit of the polyester terylene?

A
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53
Q

What is the general equation for the hydrolysis of a polyamide?

A
54
Q

What is the general structure of an amino acid?

A
55
Q

Are amino acids acidic or basic?

A
56
Q

Are amino acids chiral?

A
57
Q

How do you name this amino acid using the IUPAC rules?

A
58
Q

What is a zwitterion?

A
59
Q

Can amino acids exist as zwitterions?

A
60
Q

What is the isoelectric point of an amino acid?

A
61
Q

What is the general structure of an amino acid at their isoelectric point?

A
62
Q

What is the general structure of an amino acid at pH lower than its isoelectric point?

A
63
Q

What is the general structure of an amino acid at pH higher than its isoelectric point?

A
64
Q

How does thin layer chromatography work?

A
65
Q

Are Rf values fixed for each amino acid?

A
66
Q

How are Rf values of Amino Acids calculated in thin layer chromatography?

A
67
Q

How are Grignard reagents made?

A
68
Q

What is the reaction of Grignard reagent with aldehydes + ketones?

A
69
Q

What is the reaction of Grignard reagent with carbon dioxide?

Give eqt + conditions

A
70
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of halogenoalkanes?

A
71
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of nitriles?

A
72
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of amines?

A
73
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of aldehydes+ketones?

A
74
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of carboxylic acids?

A
75
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of esters?

A
76
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of acyl chlorides?

A
77
Q

What is the functional group, its properties and tipical reactions of acid anhydrides?

A
78
Q

What functional groups are present?

A
79
Q

What functional groups are present?

A
80
Q

What functional groups are present?

A
81
Q

What 7 types of reactions are there?

A
  • Addition
  • Substitution
  • Elimination/dehydration
  • Condensation
  • Hydrolysis
  • Oxidation
  • Reduction
82
Q

What are addition reactions?

A
83
Q

What are substitution reactions?

A
84
Q

What are elimination/dehydration reactions?

A
85
Q

What are condensation reactions?

A
86
Q

What are hydrolysis reactions?

A
87
Q

What are oxidation reactions?

A
88
Q

What are reduction reactions?

A
89
Q

What conditions are A?

A
90
Q

What conditions are B?

A
91
Q

What conditions are C?

A
92
Q

What conditions are D?

A
93
Q

What conditions are E?

A
94
Q

What conditions are F?

A
95
Q

What conditions are G?

A
96
Q

What conditions are H?

A
97
Q

What conditions are I?

A
98
Q

What conditions are J?

A
99
Q

What conditions are K?

A
100
Q

What conditions are L?

A
101
Q

What conditions are M?

A
102
Q

What conditions are N?

A
103
Q

What conditions are O?

A
104
Q

What conditions are P?

A
105
Q

What conditions are A?

A
106
Q

What conditions are B?

A
107
Q

What conditions are C?

A
108
Q

What conditions are D?

A
109
Q

What conditions are E?

A
110
Q

What conditions are F?

A
111
Q

What conditions are G?

A
112
Q

What conditions are H?

A
113
Q

What conditions are I?

A
114
Q

What conditions are J?

A
115
Q

What conditions are K?

A
116
Q

What conditions are L?

A
117
Q

What conditions are A?

A
118
Q

What conditions are B?

A
119
Q

What conditions are C?

A
120
Q

What conditions are A?

A
121
Q

What conditions are B?

A
122
Q

What conditions are A?

A
123
Q

What conditions are B?

A
124
Q

How is heating under reflux done?

A
125
Q

How is distillation done to separate substances with different bpts?

A
126
Q

How is steam distillation done?

A
127
Q

Why might anhydrous CaCl2 be used in purification?

A
128
Q

How does vacuum filtration work?

A
129
Q

How is recrystallisation done?

A
130
Q

How do impurities affect bpt?

A
131
Q

How do impurities affect mpt?

A

Lowers melting point

Sample melts/freezes over a range of temperatures.