L31-1
SCHWAN LECTURE 31
CHEM*1040
Last meeting: Lecture 30
- Stereoisomerism notes: 30-36 JA 494-8
- structural isomers
- stereoisomers
- chirality and optical rotation
Today:notes pp 39-50
physical properties
intermolecular forces
organic reactions
reactions and their intermedates
Physical properties of Organic compounds
Recall the three main types
1. London or van der Waals forces, induced polarity , due to masses of electrons
2. dipole-dipole interactions
3. H-bonding
and also electrostatic forces for ionic substances
Some functional groups can give us examples
-alkanes have
-for organic halides C-X bond is polar; extent depends on X.
Despite this, boiling points increase in the series RH < RF < RCl < RBr < RI,
For alcohols, O is quite electronegative and H is not very electronegative
considering H-bonding strength,
never do H-bonding with C-H bonds
for carboxylic acids, dimers may forms due to H-bonding
-H-bonding gives the liquids
-H-bonding to water
Complementary to the table on pp. 41 and 42
func. group / compound / bp(ºC) / propertyalkane / / -42 / London forces
ether / / -24 / dipole-dipole
alcohol / / 78 / H-bonding
amine / / 17 / weaker H-bonding
alkane / / 0 / London forces
ether / / 11 / dipole-dipole
alcohol / / 97 / H-bonding
amine / / 48 / weaker H-bonding
Consider the following trend
compound / bp(ºC) / property/ 20 / dipole-dipole
/ 118 / dipole-dipole
and
H-bonding
/ >350 / ionic
Water solubility
“LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE“
look for common functional groups in both solute and solvent
H-bonding is best
dipole-dipole interactions follow
Chemical Properties Reactions may be
1. ionic, where one reactive partner offers electrons to another, which is willing to accept them.
That receiving the electrons is the
that offering the electrons is the
electrons are attracted to electron deficient or in the extreme, positively charged atoms.
2. free radical and involve neutral species that possess single unpaired electrons
Reaction (Reactive) intermediates
Reactions usually involve some reaction intermediates: either
free radicals, anions or cations
These intermediates
For organic chemistry, these intermediate may be:
Considering the stability of cations and radicals:
Reactions of Alkanes
Free radical halogenation
general reaction:
X = Cl or Br
for bromination of propane:
for radical stability 3º > 2º > 1º
so for the bromination of
Reactions of Alkenes and Alkynes
Addition reactions
The bond of an alkene or alkyne can act like a nucleophile and can react with H+, which acts as an electrophile
and then depending on how the acid was presented , a nucleophile attaches itself to the carbocation
When there is a choice for two different modes, follow the pathway with the more substituted cation: