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Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer
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Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Organic Reactions

Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer

Page 2: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions

Addition Reactions

1. Hydrogenation• Saturating an unsaturated carbon

chain• Alkene/yne to alkane/ene

2. Hydration• Alkene to alcohol

3. Halogenation/Hydrohalogenation• Alkane to haloalkane• Alkene to haloalkane

Page 3: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions

Elimination Reactions

Condensation• Esterification• Formation of alkene• Formation of amide (peptide bond)

Substitution Reactions (like single or double replacement reactions where one atom/ion/functional group is replaced by another

• SN1

• SN2

Page 4: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Electrophiles & NucleophilesThe basic process of organic reactions occurs through attraction of positively and negatively charged parts of molecules

Page 5: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Positively and Negatively Charged Parts of Organic Molecules

Electrophiles Nucleophiles

• “loves electrons” – attracted to negative charge

• “loves nuclei” – attracted to positive charge

• may be positively charged or have deficit or electrons because atom is attached to very electronegative atom

• often negatively charged or• lone pairs• high electronegativity

• carbon of carbonyl group• acids

• alkenes• hydroxide –OH• chloride –Cl• ammonia – NH3

Organic chemistry has special names for positively and negatively chargedParts of a molecule

Page 6: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Positively and Negatively Charged Parts of Organic Molecules

• many organic reactions happen through the attraction of electrophiles for nucleophiles

• in reaction mechanisms, generally electrons from nucleophile move to electrophile

Page 7: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Alkanes are relatively inert compared to other functional groups

• Alkenes have pi bonds in which electrons are easily accessible because they aren’t trapped between two nuclei as sigma bonding electrons are.

• Other functional groups have highly electronegative atoms like O, N or halogens

Page 8: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Characteristic reactions for several functional groups reactions to recognize in bold, products indicated in ()

Functional Group Addition Elimination Substitution

Alkane Halogenation (haloalkanes)

Alkene • Hydrohalogenation (monohaloalkanes)

• Hydration (di-haloalkanes)

• Hydrogenation (alkanes)• Oxidation (-OH, C=O,

COOH)

Alcohol Condensation• w/ COOH (ester)• w/ conc. Acid or

catalist (alkene)

Oxidation (aldehyde, ketone, COOH)

Carboxylic Acid Condensation with –OH (ester)

Amine Condensation w/ COOH (amide)

Page 9: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

REACTIONS

Page 10: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Halogenation of an alkane (substitution)

• Alkane + halogen gas haloalkane• Need ultraviolet light for reaction to occur• Depending on time and amount of reactants, more than

one halogen can be added to the alkane

Page 11: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Hydrohalogenation (addition)

• Alkene + acid halide monohaloalkane• Halide ion adds to larger side (more substituted side of

alkene)• Hydrohalogenation of ethene

• Hydrohalogenation of propene: notice that the chlorine adds to the larger side of the alkene

Page 12: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Hydration (addition)

• Alkene + water in acidic solution alcohol• Acid acts as catalyst in reaction• -OH group adds to larger side (more substituted side) of

alkene• Uses: hydration is used for commercial manufacture of

ethanol• Hydration of ethene

• Hydration of propene

Page 13: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Halogenation (addition)

• Alkene + halogen gas n,n+1-dihaloalkane• Diatomic gas has two atoms – both add to opposite

sides of the double bond (and opposite sides of the molecule)

• Uses: Chlorine + ethene 1,2-dichloroethane (used as starting material for PVC)

• Uses: Br2 dissolved in dichloromethane is used to distinguish between alkenes and alkanes. If reddish-brown color of Br2 disappears when added to unknown, the unknown has alkenes in it.

Page 14: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Hydrogenation (addition)

• Alkene + hydrogen gas (with catalyst) alkane• Hydrogenation is saturating an unsaturated hydrocarbon• Also called reduction• Heterogeneous Catalyst: Pd or PtO2 (rxn occurs on a

metal surface)• Uses: unsaturated vegetable oils are saturated to

produce saturated fats (more solid at room temp than unsaturated) for margarines

Page 15: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Esterification (elimination)

• Carboxylic acid + alcohol ester + water• Reaction conditions: acidic solution• The OH group on the alcohol is replaced by the OOC-R

group of the carboxylic acid• Condensation reaction: produces water• Uses: flavoring agents, plasticizers, as solvents in

perfume, polyesters

Page 16: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Amide formation (elimination)

• Carboxylic acid + amine amide + water• Reaction condition: difficult to conduct in simple steps

since amine (a base) and acid basically neutralize each other. To form amide, other reactions that “protect” important function groups are required

• The OH group on the carboxylic acid is replaced by the amine (NH—R)

• Condensation reaction: produces water• Uses: peptide bond formation, polymerization reactions

to make nylons

video

Page 17: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Condensation of alcohol (elimination)

• Condensation of alcohol alkene• Reaction conditions:

• 170̊? and concentrated sulfuric acid or• H3PO4 and a catalyst or

• Al2O3 and a catalyst

• Condensation reaction: produces water

Page 18: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Polymerization

• Polyethylene• Reaction: n CH2=CH2 (-CH2-CH2-)n

• Three kinds of polyethylene• HDPE = gallon milk cartons (more rigid)• LDPE = plastic bags, squeeze bottles (more

flexible)• cPE = milk crates (very strong and rigid)

Page 19: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Polymerization occurs when a molecule has two functional groups

• Polymers formed are copolymers because they are made of two different monomers

• Polymers are formed in a step-growth method rather than a chain-growth method• In other words, molecules with 2 functional groups

can grow from both ends instead of just one end as in polyethylene

• Formation of a

nylon (a poly-

amide)

Page 20: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Formation of a polypeptide

• Polypeptide is a chain of amino acids, each amino acid has one carboxylic acid and one amine group

• Note that the polymerization here occurs because there are two different groups on the same molecule

• Polypeptides are not, technically, polymers since they don’t have repeating units (R group is different)

• Peptide bond between alanine and cysteine:

Page 21: Organic Reactions Mr. Montjoy, guest lecturer. 3 Basic Kinds of Organic Reactions Addition Reactions 1.Hydrogenation Saturating an unsaturated carbon.

Summary

Functional Group Addition Elimination Substitution

Alkane Halogenation (haloalkanes)

Alkene • Hydrohalogenation (monohaloalkanes)

• Hydration (di-haloalkanes)

• Hydrogenation (alkanes)• Oxidation (-OH, C=O,

COOH)

Alcohol Condensation• w/ COOH (ester)• w/ conc. Acid or

catalist (alkene)

Oxidation (aldehyde, ketone, COOH)

Carboxylic Acid Condensation with –OH (ester)

Amine Condensation w/ COOH (amide)