The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

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The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their FUNCTIONAL GROUPS Regardless of size!

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The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their FUNCTIONAL GROUPS. Regardless of size!. Carbon-hydrogen backbones can stand alone…. …or they can combine with other elements like O,N,S,Cl,Br,F , etc…. … and each combination will have distinct physi -chemical properties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

Page 1: The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their  FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

The chemical reactivity of organic molecules come from their FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

Regardless of size!

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Carbon-hydrogen backbones can stand alone…

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…or they can combine with other elements like O,N,S,Cl,Br,F, etc…

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… and each combination will have distinct physi-chemical properties.

Solubility (polar? Nonpolar?) Reactivity (pi bonds? Steric

hindrance? Etc..) Stable in acids? Bases? Reactive

with…? Electronegative-electropositive

regions:

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Section 3.5-3.9: Organic Reactions

CH21 – 12.10.13 , R.D. Bolinas

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Moving onto alkenes and alkynes, and other functional groups, we now have more reactive species. Why?

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Four major types of Organic Reactions:

ADDITION REACTIONS: reactants combine without anything leaving to form a product.

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Four major types of Organic Reactions:

ELIMINATION REACTIONS: reactant usually gives off atoms/has leaving groups. The product usually becomes more unsaturated/ forms a double/triple bond.

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Four major types of Organic Reactions:

SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS: reactants exchange groups, like –H and others to give two new products

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Four major types of Organic Reactions:

REARRANGEMENT REACTIONS: one reactant reorganizes its own bonds to form an isomer.

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Exercise: IDENTIFY!

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Exercise: IDENTIFY!

catalyst

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Exercise: IDENTIFY!

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Reaction Mechanisms

Knowing the reaction type is just the beginning.

To really appreciate how we form our products and what we form, we need to study REACTION MECHANISMS

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Reaction Mechanisms

“A mechanism describes what takes place at each stage of a chemical transformation—which bonds are broken and in what order, which bonds are formed and in what order, and what the relative rates of the steps are.”

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Reaction Mechanisms

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Reaction mechanisms entail the movement of electrons

The movement of electrons can be…

Between TWO molecules that collide with each other

In pairs (polar reactions)

WITHIN ONE molecule (internal)

Unpaired/solo (RADICAL reactions)

VS.

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The two major overarching mechanisms use arrows to show this…

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Radical reactions have: initiation, propagation, then termination steps.

Initiation: Chemical bond breaking occurs. This can sometimes be done with RADIATION. The breaking bond makes free radicals.

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Radical reactions have: initiation, propagation, then termination steps.

PROPAGATION: BOTH Chemical bond breaking and forming occurs. When a single radical reacts with a normal compound, one product will still be a free radical.

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Radical reactions have: initiation, propagation, then termination steps.

TERMINATION: TWO free radicals can pair up their unpaired electrons to finally form a stable covalent bond. This ends the reactions.

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Polar processes are the more common mechanism

Recall electronegativity and polarity Recall how many functional groups

have atoms that can make them polar

Recall also how opposite charges attract

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In polar mechanisms, electrons move from Nucleophile to Electrophile.

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In polar mechanisms, electrons move from Nucleophile to Electrophile.

Nucleophiles (Nu) – “Nucleus-loving” attracted to positive charges because it is

RICH IN ELECTRONS/ negative

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In polar mechanisms, electrons move from Nucleophile to Electrophile.

Electrophiles (E) – “Electron-loving” attracted to negative charges because it is

POOR IN ELECTRONS/ positive

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In polar mechanisms, electrons move from Nucleophile to Electrophile.

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In polar mechanisms, electrons move from Nucleophile to Electrophile.

Note that neutral compounds can often react either as nucleophiles or as electrophiles, depending on the circumstances. (e.g. H2O)

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

TOO LAZY to make this white.

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

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Sample mechanism, and how to analyze and follow it

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The mechanism is noted as an ELECTOPHILIC ADDITION

Which is the Nucleophile? The Electrophile?

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When we plot ENERGY DIAGRAMS, we can match a mechanism with THERMODYNAMIC INFO.

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Terms to remember

Reactants = where we start.Transition states = the in-

betweens usually with bonds halfway broken and half-formed, and are almost impossible to isolate.

Intermediates = another kind of in-between but more of a quick “rest-stop” form we can sometimes isolate and identify. It has its own structure (no “half-bonds”)

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Terms to remember

Activation Energy = shown as the height of a hump RELATIVE TO WHERE THE BASE IS (either the products-level or an intermediate-level). This is the energy needed to be overcome for the reaction to move forward.

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Terms to remember

Total Energy Change = this is the change in energy level from reactants to products.

A positive one (going net up) means it is ENDOGENIC and absorbs energy, so it is not as favorable.

A negative change (going net down) means the reaction is EXOGENIC and releases energy as the reaction progresses and is more favorable.

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Catalysts

LOWER ACTIVATION ENERGY!

DIFFERENT PATHWAY/ MECHANISM

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Exercises: Draw the arrows

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Exercises: Draw the arrows

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Exercises: Draw the arrows

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Exercises: Draw the arrows

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

YOU CAN DO IT! ^____^

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Exercises: follow the arrow!

OMGWTH?!!?!

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Exercises: follow the arrow!