1 / 19

Organic Chemistry

Organic Chemistry. Functional Groups Halogens, Alcohols & Ethers. Mr. Shields Regents Chemistry U17 L01. Functional Groups. Besides hydrogen or carbon bonded to carbon Many other atoms can bond to carbon and these Lead to the formation of what are called “ Functional groups ”

ishana
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 • Functional Groups • Halogens, Alcohols & Ethers Mr. Shields Regents Chemistry U17 L01

  2. Functional Groups Besides hydrogen or carbon bonded to carbon Many other atoms can bond to carbon and these Lead to the formation of what are called “Functional groups” Each Functional group has it’s own unique chemical And physical properties So what are these different fuctional groups? Let’s take a look.

  3. Check out Table R in your Reference Table. We’ll take a look at all of these Groups in time But right now we’re going to focus on… • Halides • Alcohols • Ethers

  4. Organic Halides • These compounds are often called halocarbons or the Halides • One or more hydrogen atoms in an alkane is replaced with a halogen • F, Cl, Br, or I

  5. Properties of Alkyl Halides • Alkyl halides are extremely unreactive • Often used when chemical inertness • is important • Examples: CFC’s (refrigerants, Aerosol • propellants, Teflon (polymer), Brominated • compounds (Fire retardant clothing) • - many of these compounds are now banned • from use for health and environmental • reasons.

  6. Properties of Alkyl Halides • Alkyl halides due to there high molecular wt. & stronger IMF have considerably higher B.P. and greater density than their corresponding alkanes

  7. c-c-c-c-c Br Br Naming Organic Halides Use these prefixes to specify the substituent: • fluoro, chloro, bromo, iodo • Name substituents in alphabetical order • If necessary, give locations by numbering C-atoms in longest backbone so that the halide has the lowest # • Keep halide alphbetical order. • If more than one, use di, tri, etc. to specify # of substituents. 2,3-dibromopentane Not 3,4-dibromopentane

  8. H H Br H–C–C–C–Br H F H H H–C–Cl H Naming Halides CH3ClCH3CHFCHBr2 1,1-dibromo-2-fluoropropane Chloromethane “Chloroform” C3H5Br2F

  9. F Cl H-C C-H F Cl Name this compound: 3-Bromo-2-Iodopentane Name this compound: 1,1-dicloro-2,2-difluoroethane One of the “freons”

  10. Alcohols • Alcohols contain the polar -OH functional group • OH groups are capable of Hydrogen bonding • The –OH group is sometimes referred to as a Hydroxyl group • This polar functional group affects physical properties • B.P is much higher than the corresponding Alkane • Ethanol (C2H5OH) +78C // Ethane (C2H6) -89C • Low Mol. Wt. Alcohols are very soluble in water • Ethanol is totally miscible in water, Hexanol sol. is 0.59g/100 ml

  11. CH3–CH2–O-H CH3–CH2–O-H H-O-H Hydroxyl groups Alcohols can hydrogen bond because they have a Hydrogen atom that is bonded to oxygen. This results in Much higher B.P.’s And higher water solubulity Remember… Alcohols are neither acids nor bases (they do not ionize in water to either H+ or OH-)

  12. Types of Alcohols • An –OH attached to a terminal Carbon atom (-CH2-OH) is called a primary alcohol • An –OH attached to an internal carbon with a hydrogen atom also attached to that carbon (-CHOH-) is called a secondary alcohol • An –OH attached to an internal carbon that is attached to 3 other carbons is called a tertiary alcohol Ethanol (primary) 2-propanol (secondary)

  13. Naming Alcohols • Select as the parent structure the longest continuous carbon chain that contains the –OH • Drop the –e from the alkane name of the carbon chain and add –ol • Indicate by a number (if necessary) the position of the –OH group ethanol 2-propanol

  14. Diols • Diols, like dienes have 2 functional groups • There are Two –OH groups (dihydroxy) • Instead of ending in “ol” the name ends in “diol” • Example on left – 2,2 - propanediol

  15. Triols • There are three –OH groups - Add suffix –triol to name Glycerine (common name) is actually a “Triol” • 1,2,3 –propanetriol (Glycerol) OH OH OH H2C—- CH —CH2 • Known also as Tri-hydroxy alcohols

  16. Even though ethers have an oxygen atom in their structure They are unable to form hydrogen bonds with themselves - alkyl groups are bonded directly to Oxygen - No hydrogen directly bonded to Oxygen Ethers are not linear, They have a bent shape similar to water Ethers

  17. Ether’s Properties • BP’s tend to be low • Comparable to similar MW hydrocarbons • No H-bonding possible ether to ether • Solubility in water is reasonably high for lower M.W. ethers • H-Bonding to Water is possible

  18. Name the alkyl groups on either side and add ether to the end. List attached alkyl groups in alphabetical order If the alkyl group is the same the alkyl group is prefaced by “Di” followed by “ether”. (Ex. Diethyl ether) NO NUMBERS NEEDED to designate location of Oxygen! Naming Ethers(common names) Ethylmethyl ether

  19. Naming Ethers Notice that Table R lists This name incorrectly Name this compound: Dimethyl ether Name this compound: Ethylpropyl ether

More Related