1 / 15

Organic Chemistry

Organic Chemistry . Ben Pearl, Rachel Breece , Biby Escobar, Ethan Mikuta May 29 th , 2014 Science - 6. Definition – Organic Chem. In chemistry, organic means the chemical is based on a combo of carbon atoms. It does not matter whether the chemical is natural or man-made. Carbon Bonds.

elvis
Télécharger la présentation

Organic Chemistry

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 Chemistry Ben Pearl, Rachel Breece, BibyEscobar, Ethan Mikuta May 29th, 2014 Science - 6

  2. Definition – Organic Chem. • In chemistry, organic means the chemical is based on a combo of carbon atoms. • It does not matter whether the chemical is natural or man-made.

  3. Carbon Bonds • Carbon has 4 valence electrons, which means that carbons wants to from 4 covalent bonds. • There are 3 simple hydrocarbons.

  4. Basic Hydrocarbons • Alkanes – All carbon – single bonds • Alkenes – At least one carbon – double bond. • Alkynes – One triple bond. • Hydrocarbon – an organic compound composed only of hydrogen and carbon, like the alkanes, alkenes, & alkynes

  5. Hydrocarbon Examples • Alkynes • Alkanes • Alkenes

  6. Carbon Rings • Sometimes, carbon forms rings with the other carbons or other elements. • The most frequently seen ring is the benzene rings (C6H6)

  7. Naming Organic Comps. • The name of on organic compound starts with the longest chain of compounds. • The first four names need to be memorized using “Mary Eats Peanut Butter” (Methane, Ethane, Propane, Butane)

  8. Naming Organic Comps. - #2 • The remainder are named by using the latin word for # of carbons (penta– 5, pentane has a chain of carbons) • Alkanes follow the formula CnH2N+2 • The naming of Alkenes & Alkynes are similar, except there can be no methane or methyne, it’s impossible to have a double or triple bond with one carbon.

  9. Examples • Propane • Butyne

  10. Properties - #1 • Properties have higher boiling temps. than alkenes (alkanes = -87, ethene = -104) • In a solution of dissolved bromine, one alkene will react, causing the bromine to produce a colorless liquid.

  11. Production • Much of starting material comes from crude oil. • Crude oil is a mix of many hydrocarbons and other compounds – so it’s useless. • Two primary methods of separating and generating compounds from crude oil – Frac. Dist. & Catalytic Cracking

  12. Fractional Distillation (Fracking) • At oil refinery, crude oil is heated to 200 degrees and then fed to fracking tower for further heating. • Its component rise and cool in tower. • Lower chains condense sooner & found near bottom. Opposite for shorter chains.

  13. Fracking Diagram

  14. Catalytic Cracking • The lighter fractions are in higher demand then the longer chains. Cracking solves that issue. • Silica and alumina fragments are used. • At 500 degrees, the catalyst causes longer chains to break into shorter alkane and alkene chains.

  15. Fracking Mnemonic • Fractionating Tower process R(efinery Gas) – Rabid G(asoline) – Goats N(aptha)- Nip K(erosene)- Kittens D(iesel)- Daringly F(uel Oil)- For L(ubricating Oil)- Loving R(esidue)- Reasons

More Related