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CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation...

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CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
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Page 1: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF

ORGANIC COMPOUNDS

Page 2: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

1) Addition2) Substitution3) Elimination4) Oxidation5) Reduction6) Condensatio

n7) Hydrolysis8) Combustion

Types of Substitution Reactions

She called it a Blood Bath!

I wonder why she wrote it in Japanese

Look! I think she’s using it to blow her nose

Whew! That was easy!

MAIN TYPES OF REACTIONS in Organic Chem

Page 3: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

1) ADDITION REACTION •Atoms added to a double or triple bond•Alkene or Alkyne undergoes addition reaction to break a double or triple bond•Example:

Reactant XY added to alkene makes alkaneTo recognize: Two reactants make 1 product

Page 4: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

1) ADDITION REACTIONS

Common atoms that can be added to an alkene or alkyne

•H and OH (from H2O )

•H and X (from H-X) where X= Cl , Br, or I

•X and X from (X2) where X= Cl , Br, or I

•H and H (from H2)

Page 5: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

EXAMPLES: Addition Reactions

1)

2)

Page 6: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ADDITION REACTIONS: ALKENES

•Symmetrical molecule reacts with asymmetrical molecule to give one product.

Symmetrical Asymmetrical

Page 7: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

RULES FOR ADDITION• Two asymmetrical molecules

react to give two products.Example:

Which product is favoured ?

Asymmetrical

Asymmetrical

or+

Page 8: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

Major product

Minor Product

2-bromobutane

1-bromobutane

“MARKOVNIKOV’S” Rule• "the rich get richer"• The carbon atom with the largest number of

carbon atoms gets the X (halogen) or OH bind to it

• Therefore 2- bromobutane is favoured

+

Page 9: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ADDITION REACTIONS: ALKYNES

• Also follow Markovnikov’s rule when asymmetrical

1,1,2,2-tetrabromopropane

Asymmetrical

Page 10: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ADDITION REACTIONS: ALKYNES

• May occur as two addition reactions:

+

+

Page 11: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

2) SUBSTITUTION REACTION• A hydrogen atom or functional group is

replaced by a different atom or functional group

• To recognize: two compounds react to form two products.

2-butanamine2-bromobutane

Page 12: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

2) SUBSTITUTION REACTION

1) CH3CH2-OH + HI CH3CH2-I + H2O

2)

3)

ethanol iodoethane

Page 13: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

SUBSTITUTION REACTIONAromatics

• Aromatics can only undergo substitution reactions

Page 14: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

SUBSTITUTION REACTIONAlcohols

• Halogens in HCl, HBr or HI can substitute the OH group of alcohol or the reverse.

• For Ex: CH3-CH2-OH + HCl CH3-CH2Cl +

H2O

• The reverse reaction:CH3-CH2Cl + OH- CH3-CH2-OH + Cl-

(from water)

Page 15: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

3) ELIMINATION REACTION• atoms are removed form a molecule to

form double bonds.• Reverse of addition• To recognize: One reactant breaks into

two products

Page 16: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ELIMINATION REACTION:Alcohol

• undergo elimination when heated in presence of strong acids, for example: H2SO4

Example:

Page 17: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ELIMINATION REACTION:Alkyl Halides

• Undergo elimination to produce alkenes

Bromoethane ethene hydrobromic acid

Page 18: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

Elimination

• If an asymmetrical molecule undergoes an elimination reaction, constitutional isomers can form example #3

• General rule: H atom most likely to be removed from C atom with most C-C bonds

• “The poor get poorer!” – opposite of Markovnikov’s Rule

– Called Zaitsev’s rule

Page 19: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

Elimination

(major product)

(minor product)

Page 20: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

4) OXIDATION & 5) REDUCTION REACTIONS

• Change in the number of H or O atoms bonded to C

• Always occur together• One reactant is oxidized while the

other is reduced• For now, lets focus on reactant

only…

Page 21: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

4) OXIDATION• Carbon atom forces more

bonds to Oxygen or less to Hydrogen

• For example: formation of C=O bond

• Occurs in presence of oxidizing agents [O] such as KMnO4, K2Cr2O7, and O3

• For now, focus on organic reactant only

Page 22: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

4) OXIDATION: Alcohol

• Alcohol oxidation can form an aldehyde or ketone

Primary Alcohol

Secondary Alcohol

Tertiary Alcohols do not oxidize

Page 23: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

4) OXIDATION: Aldehyde

• Aldehydes undergo oxidation to produce carboxylic acid

Example:

Page 24: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

5) REDUCTION REACTION

• Carbon atom forms fewer bonds to Oxygen or more bonds to Hydrogen

• Aldehydes, ketones and carboxyliic acids can be “reduced” to alcohols

• Alkenes and alkynes can be reduced to become alkanes

• Occurs in the presence of reducing agents such as LiAlH4, and H2/Pt

where Hydrogen [H] is added

Page 25: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

5) REDUCTION:Alkene

Page 26: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

5) REDUCTION:Aldehyde/Ketone

+ [H]

O

R1

C

R2

H

O

R1 C R2

HAldehyde or ketone Reducingagent

alcohol

Page 27: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

6) CONDENSATION• two molecules combine to form a single, bigger

molecule. • Water is usually produced in this reaction • A carboxylic acid and alcohol can condense to

form an ester– called “ esterification”

• A carboxylic acid and amine can condense to form an amide

Page 28: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

Condensation

carboxylic amine amide wateracid

R1

O

O

C

H

+R3

R2

NH + OHH

R1

O

C

R3

R2

N

Page 29: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

7) HYDROLYSIS• water adds to a bond splitting it into two • Reverse of a condensation reaction• Water can add to an ester or amide bond• Ester + water makes a carboxylic acid and

alcohol• Amide + water makes a carboxylic acid and

amine

1-propanol

Page 30: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

8) Combustion

• Type of reaction in which a compound reacts with oxygen to produce the oxides of elements that make up the compound

• 2 types:1) Complete combustion: an excess of

oxygen reacts with a hydrocarbon and produces carbon dioxide and water vapour, and releases energy

2) Incomplete combustion: reaction that occurs when insufficient oxygen is present; all elements in the fuel will not combine with oxygen to the greatest extent possible

Page 31: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

Combustion

• Example #1CxHy + O2(g) CO2(g) + H2O(g)

+ energy

• Example #2HC + O2(g) C(s) + CO(g) + CO2(g) + H2O(g) +

energy

Page 32: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

POLYMERS

• very long molecules made by linking small molecules called monomers

• Example: -PET(Polyethylene terephthalate ) polymers

- Plastics are polymers that can be heated and moulded into specific shapes and forms

-Polyethene is made from monomer of

Page 33: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

POLYMERS

can be synthetic or natural• Synthetic polymers

– man made polymer like plastics and polyester

• Natural polymers– found in nature like glucose

and silk

Page 34: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

ADDITION Polymerization• Monomers added together through multiple

addition reactions• Examples:

• Examples Pg 83: Table 2.1

Page 35: CHAPTER 2: REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. 1)Addition 2)Substitution 3)Elimination 4)Oxidation 5)Reduction 6)Condensation 7)Hydrolysis 8)Combustion Types.

CONDENSATION Polymerization

• monomers are joined together by the formation of ester or amide bond

• Water created as a side product• Example:

• Polyesters contain many ester bonds• Nylon (polyamide) contains many amide bonds


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