Organic Chemistry Notes
Organic Chemistry Notes
Organic Chemistry Notes
Carbon cycle portrays the movement of carbon in elemental and combined states on earth.
Steps of a carbon cycle:
Carbon is a versatile element and is found in many different chemical compounds, including those
found in space. Carbon is versatile because it can form single, double, and triple bonds. It can also
form chains, branched chains, and rings when connected to other carbon atoms.
The two characteristic features seen in carbon, that is, tetravalency and catenation, put together give
rise to a large number of compounds. Many have the same non-carbon atom or group of atoms
attached to different carbon chains.
Catenation: The property of forming long chains by self-linking with other carbon atoms to
form long chains, rings, double or triple bonds is called catenation.
Isomerism: Compounds with same molecular formula but different structural formula are
called isomers. An isomerism commonly seen is due to difference in the arrangement of atoms or
groups of atoms & is called structural isomerism. The 4 types of structural isomerism are:
Chain isomerism
Position
Functional
Metamerism
Tetravalency: Carbon has 4 electrons in its valence shell. Energy considerations do not
allow it to gain or lose 4 electrons; therefore it forms covalent bonds with other elements to
complete its octet. This accounts for its tetravalency and explains its ability to form a variety of
compounds.
HYDROCARBONS:
Unsaturated hydrocarbons
Fractional distillation is a process by which the hydrocarbons in crude oil are separated
into useful components based on their boiling points.
Nomenclature
1. Root word
2. Suffix
3. Prefix
• Includes the functional group present & its position in the carbon chain
- Carbon chain: numbered from left to right/ right to left depending on which way
that:
1. Functional group gets the least number possible
2. Alkyl group gets the least number possible
HOMOLOGOUS SERIES
• They can be represented by a general formula, and each member of the series
differs from the next by a single -CH2 group.
1) ALKANES:
• AKA saturated hydrocarbons because all 4 valencies of carbon are satisfied by the
general formula
• Only forms from single bonds between carbon molecules
• Generally unreactive
PREPERATION
Method of Preparation:
1) FRACTIONAL DISTILLATION
Crude oil is separated into fractions by fractional distillation. The fractions at the top
of the fractionating column have lower boiling points than the fractions at the
bottom. All of the fractions are processed further in other refining units.
Chemical Properties
Complete Combustion
Incomplete Combustion
When not enough oxygen is present => creates carbon monoxide and water
Substitution Reaction
When you substitute the hydrogens in a compound with chlorine, bromine, and
iodine
3) ALKENES
Alkenes are hydrocarbons
This leads to a homologous series with the general formula CnH2n
When carbon forms compounds each carbon atom always forms four bonds. This does not,
however, mean that each carbon is joined to four other atoms. It is possible to have bonds
grouped into pairs. These are called double bonds.
Alkenes contain carbon atoms joined by double covalent bonds.
They are unsaturated and are reactive
Preparation: CRACKING
CRACKING is a large industrial process which turns longer length molecules into shorter
length molecules (due to the high demand for petrol) by heating molecules with high
temperatures. This causes some of the carbon bonds to break and shortens the length of the
compound => producing alkenes
• Breaks down compounds into one alkane & one alkene
• Smaller compounds => lower boiling points => easier to ignite => more useful as fuels
• Example of equation: C10H22 => C8H18 + C2H4
Bromine test: compound reacts with bromine and colour turns from brown to colourless
Physical Properties:
Chemical Properties:
• Addition Reaction:
• HYDROGENATION: Adding hydrogen to alkenes to give alkanes as products
o C2H4 + H2 = > C2H6
• HALOGENATION: Adding halogens to alkenes to give haloalkanes as products
o C2H4 + Br2 = > C2H4Br2
• HYDRATION: Adding water molecules to alkenes to give alcohol as products
o C2H4 + H2O = > C2H5OH
o
• Polymerization
• When 2 or more molecules of the same compound associate to form a bigger
molecule
4) ALCOHOL
- Organic compound in which an hydroxyl functional group (-OH) is attached to a saturated
carbon (alkane)
• General formula: CnH2n+1OH
Preparation:
• Fermentation of Sugar
• Glucose produces alcohol and carbon dioxide
• C6 H12O6
• Ethanol is produced
• Addition reaction with alkenes : hydration
• When water/steam is added to an alkene, an alcohol is formed
• C2H4 + H2O = > C2H5OH
Physical Properties
Chemical Properties
• Combustion
• Incomplete and complete combustion (find above)
o difference: alkanes are replaced by the corresponding alcohol
• Esterification
• Acetic acid + alcohol => ester + water
• When carboxylic acids react with alcohols
5) CARBOXYLIC ACIDS:
• Organic compound which contains the carboxyl group –COOH that is added to an alcohol
part
• Weak organic acids
• General formula: CnH2n+1COOH
Preparation:
• Oxidation of alcohols
Alcohol + oxygen => carboxylic acid + water
C2H5OH + O2 = > CH3COOH + H2O
How to create the products of oxidation of alcohols:
o First Subtract CH2 from the product
- C2H5 = > CH3
- CH3 = > H
o Second: COOH group
Physical Properties:
Chemical Properties:
The fossil fuels are petroleum (or crude oil), coal, and natural gas. They are called fossil fuels
because fossil fuels because they are the remains on plants and animals that lived a million years ago
Petroleum is a smelly mixture of hundreds of different compounds. They are organic compounds,
meaning they contain carbon and usually hydrogen. In fact most are hydrocarbons.
• Non-renewable because as petroleum is still forming, very slowly under the oceans and we
are using petroleum a lot faster than it can form, so it might eventually run out one day.
1. Half the petroleum pumped from oil wells is used for transport
2. Rest are burned for heat in factories, homes and power stations. For eg. Heat is used to turn
water into steam, to drive turbines
3. A small percentage is used as the starting chemicals to make other things: plastics, shampoo,
paint, thread, fabric, detergents, makeup, medical drugs, and more.
Petroleum contains hundreds of different hydrocarbons. All of this isn’t very useful. So the first
step is to separate the compounds into groups with molecules of a similar size.
Materials:
• Thermometer
• Pear-shaped flask
• Petroleum (crude oil)
• Bunsen burner
• Test tube
• Watch glass
Procedure:
1. Heat the petroleum, so the compounds start evaporating. The ones with smaller molecules
go first, since it takes less energy to free these from the liquid
2. As the hot vapours rise, so does the thermometer reading. The vapours condense in the cool
test-tube.
3. Once the thermometer reading reaches 100 degrees, replace the first test tube with an
empty one. The liquid in the first test-tube is your first fraction from the distillation
4. Collect three further fractions in the same way, replacing the test-tube at 150 degrees, 200
degrees and 300 degrees.
5. Compare the fractions (how runny they are how easily they burn etc.). You can burn the
samples on a watch glass
**The trends help dictate what the fractions will be used for**
In a refinery, the fractional distillation is carried out in a power that is kept very hot at the base, and
cooler towards the top
Petroleum is pumped in the base. The compounds start to boil off. The ones with the smallest
molecules boil first, and rise to the top of the tower
As the molecules become larger, the fractions get less runny, or more viscous.
Cracking hydrocarbons
Fuels made from oil mixtures containing large hydrocarbon molecules are not efficient as they
do not flow easily and are difficult to ignite. Crude oil often contains too many large
hydrocarbon molecules and not enough small hydrocarbon molecules to meet demand. This is
where cracking comes in.
Cracking allows large hydrocarbon molecules to be broken down into smaller, more useful
hydrocarbon molecules. Fractions containing large hydrocarbon molecules are heated
to vaporise them. They are then:
heated to 600-700°C
passed over a catalyst of silica or alumina
These processes break covalent bonds in the molecules, causing thermal
decomposition reactions. Cracking produces smaller alkanes and alkenes.
Cracking of decane
Some of the smaller hydrocarbons formed by cracking are used as fuels (eg large chains are
often cracked to form octane for petrol, which is in high demand), and the alkenes are used to
make polymers in the manufacturing of plastics. Sometimes, hydrogen is also produced during
cracking.