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Hydrocarbon Derivatives:

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Hydrocarbon Derivatives: Halocarbons Alcohols Ethers – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hydrocarbon Derivatives:


1
Hydrocarbon Derivatives
  • Halocarbons
  • Alcohols
  • Ethers

2
Hydrocarbons
  • contain only carbon hydrogen
  • carbon can also form strong covalent bonds with
    other elements such as
  • O, N, F, Cl, Br, I, S, P

3
Functional Group
  • functional group
  • atom or group atoms in organic molecule
    that always behaves the same way
  • adding functional group changes chemical
    physical properties of molecule in specific ways
  • changes depend on type functional group added

4
Intermolecular Forces
  • determine boiling point solubility
  • van der Waals (dispersion) weakest
  • nonpolar molecules
  • dipole-dipole intermediate strength
  • molecule has atoms with different
    electronegativities
  • molecules not symmetrical
  • hydrogen bonding strongest
  • molecules contain H bonded to F, O, or N

5
Functional Groups
  • see Table R
  1. halocarbons
  2. alcohols
  3. ether
  4. aldehydes
  5. ketones
  6. carboxylic acid
  7. ester
  8. amines
  9. amide
  10. amino acid

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Halocarbons/Halogens/Organic Halides
  • one (or more) hydrogen atoms in alkane is
    replaced with halogen atom
  • (F, Cl, Br, or I)
  • no longer hydrocarbons!
  • called halocarbons, alkyl halides or organic
    halides

8
Table R
  • general formula halocarbons R-X
  • R represents entire hydrocarbon part of molecule
  • X represents halogen (F, Cl, Br, or I)

9
Naming Halides
  • figure out backbone name
  • prefixes specify halogen
  • fluoro, chloro, bromo, iodo
  • di, tri, tetra if more than one same halogen
  • state C attached to in backbone
  • gives location(s) of halogen(s)
  • 0
  • Note follow same basic rules learned so far
  • chain so halogen has lowest
  • halogen takes precedent over multiple bonds
    and branches

10
  • CH3Cl CH3CHFCH3

H H H HCCCH H F H
H HCCl H
2-fluoropropane
chloromethane
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12
Ranking Halogens
  • if more than 1 kind halogen atom present name
    them alphabetically
  • lowest goes to halogen alphabetically first

13
Different Halogens
4 3 2
1
chlorine 1st alphabetically determines numbering
14
Name
15
Properties of Halocarbons
  • alkane alkyl halide of similar size shape
  • alkyl halide has higher bp higher density
  • Why?
  • CH4 hydrocarbon (non-polar)
  • bp -162?C
  • density 0.423 g/ml
  • CH3Cl halogen (polar)
  • bp -24?C
  • density 0.911 g/ml

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17
Uses of Alkyl Halides
  • cleaners, solvents, plastics
  • examples
  • Teflon PVCs
  • refrigerants (used to be chlorofluorocarbons-
    now hydrofluorocarbons)

18
Halogen Derivatives
  • CH3Cl local anesthetic (chloromethane)
  • CHCl3 solvent, general anesthetic
    (trichloromethane)
  • CHI3 antiseptic (tri-iodomethane)
  • CCl4 dry cleaning solvent (tetrachloromethane)
  • CF2Cl2 refrigerant (dichloro,difluoromethane)
  • fluorocarbons teflon, lubricants, synthetic
    blood
  • chlorofluorocarbons aerosol propellants,
    refrigerants

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21
Alcohols
  • OH group replaces H in hydrocarbon
  • OH group called hydroxyl group

22
Table R
  • general formula Alcohols R?OH
  • R represents entire hydrocarbon part of molecule
  • OH is hydroxyl group

23
alcohols are non-electrolytes!
  • hydroxyl group (hydroxide ion of bases)
  • - does not form ions in water! (no metal like
    bases)
  • hydroxyl group is polar
  • alcohols soluble in water

24
Naming AlcohOLs
  • based on alkane name
  • name parent chain
  • drop e ending replace with ol
  • C OH group(s) attached to (if 3 carbons)

25
Naming
H H H H H?C?C?C?C?H H OH H H
1-butanol bp 100?C
2-butanol Bp 115?C
26
more than 1 hydroxyl group
  • use prefixes di-, tri-, tetra-
  • put before -ol ending
  • tell of hydroxyl groups

27
Classifying Alcohols
  1. by of hydroxyl groups
  2. by position of each hydroxyl group on main carbon
    chain

28
hydroxyl groups
  • monohydroxy alcohol 1 hydroxyl group
  • dihydroxy alcohol 2 OH groups
  • trihydroxy alcohol 3 OH groups

29
position of hydroxyl group monohydroxy alcohols
  • primary alcohol
  • -OH group attached to end C of chain
  • secondary alcohol
  • -OH group attached to C bonded to 2 other Cs
  • tertiary alcohol
  • -OH group attached to C at branch point
  • (C bonded to 3 other Cs)

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33
Properties of Alcohols
  • contain H bonded to O atom
  • hydrogen bonding
  • alcohols higher bp than corresponding alkane
  • like dissolves like
  • alcohols tend to be very soluble in water

34
H-bond
35
Which compound has the highest boiling point?
  • CH4
  • C2H6
  • C3H8
  • C3H7OH

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38
Ethers
  • general formula R?O?R?
  • where R? may or may not be same as R
  • R and R? are hydrocarbon branches
  • O is oxygen bridge
  • ethers are not linear
  • they are bent, like water

39
Properties of Ethers
  • pure ether no hydrogen bonding
  • weak dipole-dipole interactions since polar
  • bent, like H2O
  • ethyl ether once used as anesthesia

40
Properties of Ethers
  • compared to alkanes with same Cs
  • higher bps than alkanes
  • (ethers have greater mass due to O)
  • more soluble in water than alkanes
  • (ethers are polar, alkanes are not)
  • compared to alcohols with same Cs
  • lower bps than similar alcohols
  • (ethers dont have H-bonds, alcohols do)
  • much less soluble in water than alcohols
  • (ethers less polar than alcohols)

41
Naming Ethers
  • if both hydrocarbon branches identical
  • name branch only once followed by ether
  • if 2 branches are different
  • list names alphabetically followed by ether

42
H H H?C?O?C?H H H
H H H H H H H?C?C?C?O?C?C?C?H
H H H H H H
43
H H H H H?C?O?C?C?C?H H H
H H
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