Organic Chemistry Summary
Organic Chemistry Summary
Organic Chemistry Summary
Only 2 unpaired electrons hence can only form 2 σ bonds. 4 unpaired electrons but electrons in p orbitals are
Hence excitation occurs and electron from 2s is promoted perpendicular to each other and not tetrahedral.
to 2p
• Both ground state and excited state of C is insufficient to explain the shape of CH 4. Hence concept of
hybridisation is required.
• Hybridisation is the mixing of valence orbitals to form σ bonds.
No of σ bond 4 3 2
Electron
config
(excited state)
Mix 2s + 2px + 2py + 2pz 2s + 2px + 2py 2s + 2px
Giving
1
• Hence from the number of σ bonds formed for each C, the state of hybridisation can be deduced
H O H
N C C O C C C
H H
• Hybridisation occurs in ALL simple covalent compounds, not only for carbon in organic compounds
Classification of Organic Compounds
Hydrocarbons can be classified as:
• aliphatic (straight or branched chain) eg hexane C6H14
• alicyclic (closed ring) eg cyclohexane C6H12
• aromatic eg benzene C6H6
Functional Group
• Each type of organic compound contains the same reactive group of atoms that governs the
chemical properties. This reactive group of atoms is called a functional group.
• Compounds in a homologous series with the same functional group and general formulae are
called homologues. They have similar chemical properties due to the same functional group.
Compound Functional group Prefix or suffix Example
H
Alkane H C H
-ane
(CnH2n+2)
H
Methane
H H
Alkene C C
(CnH2n) C C -ene
H H
Ethene
H
H C Cl
Halogenoalkane halo-
(R = alkyl group H
X = F, Cl, Br, I) chloromethane
H
Alcohol H C OH
-ol
H
methanol
H
O
H C C
Aldehyde -al
H H
ethanal
2
O
CH3 C
Ketone -one
CH3
propanone
O
Carboxylic acid -oic acid
CH3 C
OH
ethanoic acid
O
-thyl -oate CH3 C
Ester
(alcohol, acid)
O CH3
methyl ethanoate
O
Acid chloride -oyl chloride
CH3 C
Cl
ethanoyl chloride
O
CH3 C
Amide -amide
NH2
ethanamide
CH3CH2 NH2
Amine -amine
ethylamine
CH3CH2 C N
Nitrile -nitrile
propanenitrile
X = OH, Cl,
Benzene CHO, COOH,
derivatives NH2
chlorobenzene
3
Exercise 1
List the functional groups present in the following:
(a) (b) (c)
H H H O CH3 H
H C
H C C C C N H C C N OH
H O
H O H H H O H
C O
OH
International Union of Pure & Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) Nomenclature for Organic Compounds
Naming compound from given structure
1. Identify most important Functional Group (FG). Halogen assigned as Substituent.
2. Find longest chain that contains FG
3. Identify and assign number to FG and Substituent
a) smallest number assigned to FG
b) if no FG, smallest number assigned to Substituent
c) if more than 1 Substituent, sum of numbers as small as possible
d) if sum of numbers same, priority given to first cited substituent (alphabetical order)
4. Arrange Substituent in alphabetical order
a) no spacing between letters
b) dash “-” between letter and number
c) comma “,” between numbers
d) numbers represent position of FG and Substituent
e) if have 2, 3 or 4 of the same Substituent, add prefix “di”, “tri”, or “tetra” respectively
Examples:
CH2ClCH2COOH, CH3CH2CH2CH(CH2CH3)CH3, CH3CH2CH(CH2CH3)COOH, CH3C(CH3)2CHICH2CH3,
CH3CH2CH(Br)CH(CH3)CH2CH3
4
Drawing structural formula from name
1. Draw and number parent skeleton
2. Draw FG
3. Draw all Substituents from Left to Right
4. Fill in remaining Hydrogen
Exercise 2
Give IUPAC names for the following structures:
H H H H H Cl H
H3C C C CH2CH3 H3C C C Cl H3C C C C OH
H CH3 H
a. CH2CH2CH3 H CH3H
b. c.
5
H Cl OH CH3 CH3CH2
H3C C C C CH3
H H CH3
CH2CH3
d. e. methylcyclopentane f. 1-ethyl-3-methylcyclopentane
g. h. i.
Exercise 3
Draw the displayed structures for the following compounds
a. 2-methylbutan-2-ol b. 1-bromo-1-methylcyclohexane
c. 6-oxoheptanoic acid d. 2-hydroxy-2-methylpropanoic acid
Isomerism
• different compounds possessing the same molecular formula but existing in different forms
because they have different arrangement of atoms.
◦ Structural (Constitutional) Isomerism – same molecular formula but different structural
formula
◦ Stereoisomerism – same structural formula but different spatial arrangement of atoms
▪ Total number of stereoisomers = 2 n, where n is the number of stereocentres (chiral C or
alkene with cis-trans isomerism)
FG Different FG C4 H8 O 2
6
Exercise 4
Draw structural formula of all possible isomers for C 5H12.
Types of Stereoisomerism
Geometric (Cis-Trans) Isomerism
- Structure with bulkier groups on the same side of double bond is cis-isomer, while
structure with bulkier groups on opposite sides of double bond is trans-isomer.
Example
CH3CH=CHCH3
- Cis-isomer has higher boiling point than trans-isomer as the bulkier groups are on the same side,
hence more polar. However, cis-isomer has a lower melting point as it has lower symmetry and packing
in the solid state is less efficient.
- Geometric isomers have identical chemical properties except in their interactions with another molecule
with stereochemistry
Optical Isomerism
Example
CH3CH(OH)COOH
- Optical isomers have identical physical properties except for their optical activity. Both enantiomers are
optically active (ability to rotate plane polarised light). Specific rotation of plane polarised light are equal
in magnitude but opposite in direction
7
- A racemic mixture of equal amounts of both enantiomers has no net optical activity as the rotating
capacity of one enantiomer is exactly cancelled out by the other
Exercise 5
a. Determine if the following compounds exhibit geometric isomerism and draw the structures of the isomers
if any.
i. (CH3)2C=CHCH3 ii. CH3CH2C(CH3)=CHCOOH iii.
b. Determine if the following compounds exhibit optical isomerism. Identify any chiral centre with an asterisk
and draw structures of the isomers.
i. butan-2-ol ii. 3-ethyl-3-methylhexane iii. 4-hydroxyhexanoic acid
iv. methylcyclohexane v. 1-bromo-3-methylcyclohexane
8
Terms and Concepts in Organic Reactions
Term Description Example
Homolytic Bond breaks equally to form 2 neutral radicals (odd Cl2
fission electron species)
9
10