Ch03 Functional Groups
Ch03 Functional Groups
Ch03 Functional Groups
Representative Carbon
Compounds:
Functional Groups,
Intermolecular Forces
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Hydrocarbons: Alkanes, Alkenes, Alkynes, and
Aromatic Compounds
Hydrocarbons contain only carbon and hydrogen atoms
Subgroups of Hydrocarbons:
Alkanes contain only carbon-carbon single bonds
Alkenes contain one or more carbon-carbon double bonds
Alkynes contain one or more carbon-carbon triple bonds
Aromatic hydrocarbons contain benzene-like structures
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Saturated hydrocarbons: contain only carbon-carbon single
bonds e.g. alkanes
Unsaturated hydrocarbons: contain double or triple carbon-
carbon bonds e.g. alkene, alkynes, aromatics
Contain fewer than maximum number of hydrogens per
carbon
Capable of reacting with H2 to become saturated
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Alkanes
Principle sources of alkanes are natural gas and petroleum
Smaller alkanes (C1 to C4) are gases at room
temperature
Methane is
A component of the atmosphere of many planets
Major component of natural gas
Produced by primitive organisms called methanogens
found in mud, sewage and cows’ stomachs
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Alkenes
Ethene (ethylene) is a major industrial feedstock
Used in the production of ethanol, ethylene oxide and
the polymer polyethylene
Propene (propylene) is also very important in industry
Molecular formula C3H6
Used to make the polymer polypropylene and is the
starting material for acetone
Many alkenes occur naturally
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Alkynes
Ethyne (acetylene) is used in welding torches because it
burns at high temperature
Many alkynes are of biological interest
Capillin is an antifungal agent found naturally
Dactylyne is a marine natural product
Ethinyl estradiol is a synthetic estrogen used in oral
contraceptives
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Benzene: A Representative Hydrocarbon
Benzene is the prototypical aromatic compound
The Kekulé structure is a six-membered ring with
alternating double and single bonds
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Polar Covalent Bonds
Polar covalent bonds occur when a covalent bond is
formed between two atoms of differing electronegativities
The more electronegative atom draws electron density
closer to itself
The more electronegative atom develops a partial
negative charge (d-) and the less electronegative atom
develops a partial positive charge (d+)
A bond which is polarized is a dipole and has a dipole
moment
The direction of the dipole can be indicated by a dipole
arrow. The arrow head is the negative end of a dipole,
the crossed end is the positive end.
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Example: the molecule HCl
The more electronegative chlorine draws electron density
away from the hydrogen
Chlorine develops a partial negative charge
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Molecular Dipole
In diatomic molecules a dipole exists if the two atoms
are of different electronegativity
In more complicated molecules the molecular dipole
is the sum of the bond dipoles
Some molecules with very polar bonds will have no
net molecular dipole because the bond dipoles cancel
out
The center of positive charge and negative charge
coincide in these molecules
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Examples
In carbon tetrachloride the bond dipoles cancel and the
overall molecular dipole is 0 Debye
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Cl H
trans 1,2-dichloroethene
Dipol moment= 0
H Cl
Cl Cl
cis1,2-dichloroethene
Dipol moment= 1.90 debye
H H
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Functional Groups
Functional group families are characterized by the
presence of a certain arrangement of atoms called a
functional group
A functional group is the site of most chemical reactivity of
a molecule and responsible for many of the physical
properties of a molecule
Alkanes do not have
a functional groups
Carbon-carbon
single bonds and
carbon-hydrogen
bonds are
generally very
unreactive
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Alkyl Groups and the Symbol R
Alkyl groups are obtained by removing a hydrogen from an
alkane
Often more than one alkyl group can be obtained from an
alkane by removal of different kinds of hydrogens
Alkyl Halides
In alkyl halides, halogen (F, Cl, Br, I) replaces the hydrogen of
an alkane
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They are classified based on the carbon the halogen is
attached to
If the carbon is attached to one other carbon that carbon
is primary (1o) and the alkyl halide is also 1o
If the carbon is attached to two other carbons, that
carbon is secondary (2o) and the alkyl halide is 2o
If the carbon is attached to three other carbons, the
carbon is tertiary (3o) and the alkyl halide is 3o
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Alcohols
In alcohols the hydrogen of the alkane is replaced by the
hydroxyl (-OH) group
An alcohol can be viewed as either a hydroxyl derivative
of an alkane or an alkyl derivative of water
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Ethers
Ethers have the general formula R-O-R or R-O-R’
These can be considered organic derivatives of water in
which both hydrogens are replaced by organic groups
The bond angle at oxygen is close to the tetrahedral
angle
Amines
Amines are organic derivatives of ammonia
They are classified according to how many alkyl groups
replace the hydrogens of ammonia
This is a different classification scheme than that used in
alcohols
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Aldehydes and Ketones
Both contain the carbonyl group
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Carboxylic Acids, Esters and Amides
All these groups contain a carbonyl group bonded to an
oxygen or nitrogen
Carboxylic Acids
Contain the carboxyl (carbonyl + hydroxyl) group
Esters
A carbonyl group is bonded to an alkoxyl (OR’) group
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Amide
A carbonyl group is bonded to a nitrogen derived from
ammonia or an amine
Nitriles
An alkyl group is attached to a carbon triply bonded to a
nitrogen
This functional group is called a cyano group
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Summary of Important Families of Organic Compounds
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Physical Properties and Molecular Structure
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Ion-Ion Forces
Ion-ion forces are between positively and negatively
charged ions
These are very strong forces that hold a solid
compound consisting of ions together in a crystalline
lattice
Melting points are high because a great deal of
energy is required to break apart the crystalline
lattice
Boiling points are so high that organic ions often
decompose before they boil
Example: Sodium acetate
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Dipole-Dipole Forces
Dipole-dipole forces are between molecules with
permanent dipoles
There is an interaction between d+ and d- areas in each
molecule; these are much weaker than ion-ion forces
Molecules align to maximize attraction of d+ and d-
parts of molecules
Example: acetone
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Hydrogen Bonds
Hydrogen bonds result from very strong dipole-dipole
forces
There is an interaction between hydrogens bonded to
strongly electronegative atoms (O, N or F) and nonbonding
electron pairs on other strongly electronegative atoms (O,
N or F)
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van der Waals Forces (London or Dispersion
Forces)
Van der Waals forces result when a temporary dipole in a
molecule caused by a momentary shifting of electrons
induces an opposite and also temporary dipole in an
adjacent molecule
These temporary opposite dipoles cause a weak
attraction between the two molecules
Molecules which rely only on van der Waals forces
generally have low melting points and boiling points
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Polarizability predicts the magnitude of van der Waals
Interactions
Polarizability is the ability of the electrons on an atom
to respond to a changing electric field
Atoms with very loosely held electrons are more
polarizable
Iodine atoms are more polarizable than fluorine atoms
because the outer shell electrons are more loosely
held
Atoms with unshared electrons are more polarizable
(a halogen is more polarizable than an alkyl of similar
size)
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Solubilities
Water dissolves ionic solids by forming strong dipole-ion
interactions
These dipole-ion interactions are powerful enough to
overcome lattice energy and interionic interactions in
the solid
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Generally like dissolves like
Polar solvents tend to dissolve polar solids or polar liquids
Methanol (a water-like molecule) dissolves in water in all
proportions and interacts using hydrogen-bonding to the
water
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Generally one hydrophilic group (e.g. hydroxyl) can make a
compound with 3 carbons completely soluble in water
One hydrophilic group can make a 5 carbon compound at
least partially soluble
A compound is water soluble if at least 3g of it will dissolve
in 100 mL water
Summary of Attractive Electric Forces
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