PPT
... • Find the longest chain that contains C=O. • Using the root alkane name, drop the –e ending and change to –one. • Number the longest carbon chain so the C=O group has the lowest number. • Name and number other substituents as before. Examples: ...
... • Find the longest chain that contains C=O. • Using the root alkane name, drop the –e ending and change to –one. • Number the longest carbon chain so the C=O group has the lowest number. • Name and number other substituents as before. Examples: ...
Organic Synthesis Part 2
... 'electrophilic' hydride reagents c) diisobutylaluminium hydride Available as solutions from Aldrich. The tricoordinate aluminium is, of course, a strong Lewis acid. It won't give up H- to become an Bu2Al+ cation; rather it waits until it is complexed by a Lewis base (eg a carbonyl group!) then donat ...
... 'electrophilic' hydride reagents c) diisobutylaluminium hydride Available as solutions from Aldrich. The tricoordinate aluminium is, of course, a strong Lewis acid. It won't give up H- to become an Bu2Al+ cation; rather it waits until it is complexed by a Lewis base (eg a carbonyl group!) then donat ...
Boiling-Point Elevation of a Solution
... Aldehydes and ketones share the carbonyl functional group which features carbon doubly bonded to oxygen. In the case of ketones there are two carbon atoms bonded to the carbonyl carbon and no hydrogens. In the case of aldehydes there is at least one hydrogen bonded to the carbonyl carbon, the other ...
... Aldehydes and ketones share the carbonyl functional group which features carbon doubly bonded to oxygen. In the case of ketones there are two carbon atoms bonded to the carbonyl carbon and no hydrogens. In the case of aldehydes there is at least one hydrogen bonded to the carbonyl carbon, the other ...
Topic 16 Test - A
... How many structural isomers, which are aldehydes, have the molecular formula C5H10O? A ...
... How many structural isomers, which are aldehydes, have the molecular formula C5H10O? A ...
Aldehydes and Ketones
... • Carbonyl compound: Any compound that contains a carbonyl group, C=O. • Carbonyl group: A functional group that has a C atom joined to an O atom by a double bond. • The bond angles between the three substituents on the carbonyl carbon atom are 120°, or close to it. ...
... • Carbonyl compound: Any compound that contains a carbonyl group, C=O. • Carbonyl group: A functional group that has a C atom joined to an O atom by a double bond. • The bond angles between the three substituents on the carbonyl carbon atom are 120°, or close to it. ...
Lectures 15, 16 and 17
... carbonyl determines the type of reactions the carbonyl compound will undergo. • Carbonyl carbons are sp2 hybridized, trigonal planar, and have bond angles that are ~1200. In these ways, the carbonyl group resembles the trigonal planar sp2 hybridized carbons of a C=C. ...
... carbonyl determines the type of reactions the carbonyl compound will undergo. • Carbonyl carbons are sp2 hybridized, trigonal planar, and have bond angles that are ~1200. In these ways, the carbonyl group resembles the trigonal planar sp2 hybridized carbons of a C=C. ...
Chapter 19. Aldehydes and Ketones
... pair of electrons on the adjacent atom occurs very readily, giving useful, stable imines For example, hydroxylamine forms oximes and 2,4dinitrophenylhydrazine readily forms 2,4dinitrophenylhydrazones ...
... pair of electrons on the adjacent atom occurs very readily, giving useful, stable imines For example, hydroxylamine forms oximes and 2,4dinitrophenylhydrazine readily forms 2,4dinitrophenylhydrazones ...
Blue and Red Gradient
... and organic acids Ketones – used in perfumes and paints as a stabilizer Formaldehyde – Used in tanning, preserving, and embalming and as a germicide, fungicide, and insecticide for plants and vegetables Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) – solvent, poison, used in rubber based cement and ink ...
... and organic acids Ketones – used in perfumes and paints as a stabilizer Formaldehyde – Used in tanning, preserving, and embalming and as a germicide, fungicide, and insecticide for plants and vegetables Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) – solvent, poison, used in rubber based cement and ink ...
carbonyl group
... Aldehydes and ketones are characterized by the presence of the carbonyl group, which is perhaps the most important functional group in organic chemistry. Aldehydes have at least one hydrogen atom attached to the carbonyl carbon atom. The remaining group may be another hydrogen atom or any aliphatic ...
... Aldehydes and ketones are characterized by the presence of the carbonyl group, which is perhaps the most important functional group in organic chemistry. Aldehydes have at least one hydrogen atom attached to the carbonyl carbon atom. The remaining group may be another hydrogen atom or any aliphatic ...
Aldol reaction
The aldol reaction is a means of forming carbon–carbon bonds in organic chemistry.Discovered independently by Charles-Adolphe Wurtz and Alexander Borodin in 1872, the reaction combines two carbonyl compounds (the original experiments used aldehydes) to form a new β-hydroxy carbonyl compound. These products are known as aldols, from the aldehyde + alcohol, a structural motif seen in many of the products. Aldol structural units are found in many important molecules, whether naturally occurring or synthetic.For example, the aldol reaction has been used in the large-scale production of the commodity chemical pentaerythritoland the synthesis of the heart disease drug Lipitor (atorvastatin, calcium salt).The aldol reaction unites two relatively simple molecules into a more complex one. Increased complexity arises because up to two new stereogenic centers (on the α- and β-carbon of the aldol adduct, marked with asterisks in the scheme below) are formed. Modern methodology is capable of not only allowing aldol reactions to proceed in high yield but also controlling both the relative and absolute stereochemical configuration of these stereocenters. This ability to selectively synthesize a particular stereoisomer is significant because different stereoisomers can have very different chemical and biological properties.For example, stereogenic aldol units are especially common in polyketides, a class of molecules found in biological organisms. In nature, polyketides are synthesized by enzymes that effect iterative Claisen condensations. The 1,3-dicarbonyl products of these reactions can then be variously derivatized to produce a wide variety of interesting structures. Often, such derivitization involves the reduction of one of the carbonyl groups, producing the aldol subunit. Some of these structures have potent biological properties: the immunosuppressant FK506, the anti-tumor agent discodermolide, or the antifungal agent amphotericin B, for example. Although the synthesis of many such compounds was once considered nearly impossible, aldol methodology has allowed their efficient synthesis in many cases.A typical modern aldol addition reaction, shown above, might involve the nucleophilic addition of a ketone enolate to an aldehyde. Once formed, the aldol product can sometimes lose a molecule of water to form an α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compound. This is called aldol condensation. A variety of nucleophiles may be employed in the aldol reaction, including the enols, enolates, and enol ethers of ketones, aldehydes, and many other carbonyl compounds. The electrophilic partner is usually an aldehyde or ketone (many variations, such as the Mannich reaction, exist). When the nucleophile and electrophile are different, the reaction is called a crossed aldol reaction; on the converse, when the nucleophile and electrophile are the same, the reaction is called an aldol dimerization.