introduction to organic chem. part 1 intro to hydrocarbons & naming rules

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Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

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Page 1: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Introduction to Organic Chem.

Part 1Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Page 2: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Organic Chemistry:The study of carbon

containing compounds

Page 3: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

-Most of the compounds that make up your body contain carbon.

-Carbon containing compounds are often called “organic” compounds.

Carbon Compounds and Biomolecules

A trans-fatty acid

Page 4: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon: The backbone of life• Living organisms are

made up mostly of molecules based on carbon.

• Thus the term “carbon-based life forms”.

Page 5: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon: The backbone of life

• Americans, on average, consume 140 lbs of sugar per year, much of it in the form of fructose (High Fructose Corn Syrup),

Fructose, a hexose sugar

Page 6: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon: The backbone of life

• Cellulose, found in plant cell walls, is the most abundant organic compound on Earth

Page 7: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon bonding

• The small atomic size of carbon makes the bonds very strong (notice the close proximity of the electrons to the protons)

• Carbon is unparalleled in its ability to form large, complex molecules

Page 8: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon Fiber

• High strength, but very low weight fiber.

• Used in sports and military applications

Page 9: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Carbon Allotropes

• When an element can take on different shapes, functions, or structures because of different bonding arrangements of the atoms, these are called allotropes.

• Diamonds, graphite, and nanotubes are all allotropes of carbon.

Page 11: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Hydrocarbons

Page 12: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Hydrocarbon Videos1. How oil is “made”

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yn99YJXpbQ

2. Fracking, the untold story1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEB_Wwe-uBM

3. Hydrocarbon Cracking1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsqlv4rWnEg

4. Fractional Distillation1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYMWUz7TC3A

Page 15: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Methane, propane, etc.

Gasoline, etc.

Kerosene, etc.

Diesel, etc.

Methane, propane, etc.

Page 23: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Hydrocarbon skeletal structure

Octane skeletal structure

The lines between the joints represent the bonds between the atoms. In this case, they are all single bonds, so this is an alkane

Bonds

Page 27: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Introduction to Hydrocarbon Nomenclature(naming rules)

Page 28: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules
Page 30: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Hydrocarbon general naming formulas

CnH2n+2 = alkane

CnH2n = alkene

CnH2n-2 = alkyne

Page 31: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Try it out: Convert the following…

1) C3H8 ____________

2) Propyne __________3) C4H8 ____________

4) pentene __________5) C6H10 ____________

6) hexane __________

Page 32: Introduction to Organic Chem. Part 1 Intro to Hydrocarbons & Naming Rules

Hydrocarbons can form rings ***Note that the general formula doesn’t work now because of the ring

structure. You must look at the bond lines***

C5H10C6H12 C6H6