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test 1B
definitions/concepts/naming
36
Organic Chemistry
Undergraduate 2
02/10/2013

Additional Organic Chemistry Flashcards

 


 

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Term
[image]
Definition
toluene
Term
[image]
Definition
phenol
Term
[image]
Definition
aniline
Term
[image]
Definition
acetophenone
Term
[image]
Definition
benzaldehyde
Term
[image]
Definition
Term
[image]
Definition
p-xylene
Term
[image]
Definition
styrene
Term
of bromination of an alkene and catalyzed bromination of an arene, which of the two is faster and why?
Definition

bromination of an alkene is faster, because the beginning state is less stable (more energy), and therefore closer to the high-energy carbocation intermediate.

 

benzene is so stable and low in energy that its bromination takes a lot longer because the difference between benzene and the carbocation intermediate is so much greater - even though the intermediate is more stable than that of the alkene carbocation, the benzene is MUCH more stable.

Term
why doesn't an addition product form when you brominate benzene?
Definition
because it is MUCH less stable than the substitution product, which is still aromatic (the addition product with a double bromine is not.)
Term
what halogen can't be added via substitution to a benzene?
Definition
fluorine
Term
what must be present in order to iodonate a benzene?
Definition
an oxidizing agent
Term
what are the four limits of FC alkylation?
Definition

- ONLY alkyl halides work (no double or triple bonds allowed next to the halide)

- EWG and amino groups PREVENT THE REACTION

- and it's hard to stop after one sub (polyalkylation)

- skeletal rearrangement (you get mixed products)

Term
why do actors activate, and deactivators deactivate?
Definition
anything that makes the intermediate ring carbocation more stable ACTIVATES by donating electrons. Anything that makes it less stable and takes away electrons DEACTIVATES.
Term
why does making the benzene ring electron poor deactivate it?
Definition
because the carbocation intermediate is destabilized, raising the activation energy
Term
why are the meta and para positions more stable for substitution to a phenol?
Definition
because in those positions the O can donate electrons to the ring with resonance. In the meta position, it can't.
Term
why do deactivators direct to the meta position?
Definition
because the positive charge on the ring then can't be directly on where they are attached - so they can't draw the electrons out and destabilize as much
Term
how do we know that nucleophilic aromatic substitution doesn't take place by SN1 or SN2?
Definition
can't take place by SN2, because the carbocation intermediate (after the halogen leaves spontaneously) would be too unstable and so it never happens. Can't take place by SN1 because the nucleophile can't come in through the back of the molecule because it's blocked by the ring structure.
Term
nucleophilic aromatic substitution can happen to a benzene that...
Definition
has electron withdrawing substituents
Term
meisenheimer complex
Definition
resonance-stabled, negatively charged (carbanion) intermediate after the -OH- attacks in nucleophilic aromatic substitution
Term
what are the three things that make a compound more acidic?
Definition

1. if the conjugate base (anion) is smaller - this means it's easier to solvate and therefore more stable

2. if it has larger atoms in it - a sulfur containing compound will be more acidic than an oxygen-containing one, for example. This is because the negative charge of the conjugate base will be dispersed over a larger volume.

3. If it has electron withdrawing groups, these will also stabilize the anion.

Term
why are phenols so much more acidic than alcohols?
Definition
because their conjugate ion is resonance stabilized - the negative charge is delocalized.
Term
what sort of substituent group would make a substituted phenol more acidic?
Definition
to make it MORE acidic you would stabilize the anion by adding an electron-withdrawing group
Term
how do you turn the name of an alcohol into the name of its anion?
Definition
add -ate to the end of the whole name
Term
what happens when you attempt to react a gringnard reagent with X-[c]-F where F = -OH, NH, SH, or CO2H?
Definition
the grignard reagent is protonated by the functional groups
Term
what reagent would you use to convert a TERTIARY alcohol to an alkyl halide? What about PRIMARY/SECONDARY?
Definition

HCl or HBr (SN1 mechanism) for tertiary;

 

SOCl2 or PBr3 (SN2 mechanism) for primary/secondary

Term
to perform an alkene dehydration with H3O+/THF, what is the problem with doing it on a primary alcohol and how do we get around it?
Definition
there is a carbocation intermediate that is too unstable on a primary carbon, so instead we use POCl3/pyridine
Term
what kind of alcohol refuses to be oxidized?
Definition
tertiary alcohols
Term
what is the difference between oxidizing primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols?
Definition

primary: PCC will oxidize to an aldehyde, but CrO3 will oxidize all the way to a carboxylic acid

 

secondary: both PCC and CrO3 will reduce to a ketone

 

tertiary: will not react with either

Term
how would you protect a reactive functional group (such as an alcohol) in preparation for reacting a molecule with a gringnard reagent?
Definition
use chlorotrimethyl silane to protect it
Term
what is the potential problem with using chlorotrimethyl silane to protect a functional group, and how is it averted?
Definition
Si is tertiary - we might think this would prevent the SN2 reaction from happening, but since Si's bonds to the methyl groups are so much longer than C's would be, the reaction can happen anyway (not enough hindrance to stop it)
Term
how do you oxidize a phenol?
Definition
by using Fremy's salt (potassium disulfonate) (KSO3)2NO, which gives you a =O arranged opposite each other on the ring. it's reversed with SnCl2 to give a double phenol (hydroquinone)
Term
in NMR, why do we never see splitting for an alcohol hydrogen?
Definition
because it exchanges rapidly with the H in the solvent
Term
PCC
Definition
pyridinium chloro chromate
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