MCAT Organic Chemistry

  1. Hybrid Orbitals: types, compositions, and geometries as they relate to σ and π bonds
    • 1 s and 3 p orbitals combine to make 4 sp3 orbitals and 4 σ bonds in an approximately tetrahedral shape, 109.5o separation (ex. CH4)
    • 1s + 2p orbitals make 3 sp2 orbitals which will make 3 σ bonds with 120o separation in a trigonal planar shape leaving one p orbital to participate in a π bond (ex. H2C=CH2)
    • 1s + 1p orbital makes 2 sp orbitals which make 2 σ bonds at 180o separation in a linear shape leaving 2 p orbitals to participate in π bonds (ex. alkynes like HCΞCH)
  2. VSEPR (valence shell electron-pair repulsion) theory
    • Used to predict the shapes of molecules
    • based on the idea that electron pairs will spread out as much as possible
    • Double and triple bonds act as a single contribution (so O=C=O only has 2 which will make 180o separation and be linear)
    • Lone pairs and pairs in bonds count but lone pairs are actually stronger because they are closer to the nucleus of the atom of interest
    • H2O is not linear because of the 2 lone pairs on oxygen --> bent (orbitals are approximately tetrahedral)
    • NH3 is not trigonal planar because of the lone pair on N --> pyramidal (orbitals of N are also approximately tetrahedral)
    • BF3 is trigonal planar because B does not have any lone pairs, just 3 pairs in bonds with 120o separation
  3. Delocalized electrons and resonance
    • Delocalized electrons are electrons that do not explicitly belong to any one atom or bond in a molecule
    • Often π bond electrons fall into this category, especially in ionic structures
    • Best example, a C6 (benzene) ring contains 6 delocalized electrons drawn as a circle inside the ring meaning that 2 resonance structures are equally possible for the positions of the π bonds.
  4. Multiple bonding effects on bond length, bond energies, and structure rigidity
    • a pi bond is weaker than a sigma bond (thus a double bond is not twice as strong as a single bond)
    • more bonds makes the total bond shorter and stronger (even though each component is weaker)
    • rigidity is increased because only single bonds rotate freely (even partial double bonds like the peptide bond prevent free rotation)
    • rare quadruple bonds contain 1 sigma, 2 pi, and 1 delta bond, only form between transition metals
  5. Types of Isomers and basic definition
    • Isomers have the same molecular formula but different structural formulas
    • Constitutional isomers (structural isomers) have different connectivity: Positional have same fxn'l groups positioned differently & Functional have different fxn'l groups
    • Geometric isomers (cis/trans; Z/E; R(D)/S(L)): have same connectivity but differ in arrangement
    • Stereoisomers (enantiomers & diastereomers): have chiral carbon(s) with R(D)/S(L) designations
    • Enantiomers: every chiral carbon is opposite
    • Diastereomers: not all, but some chiral carbons are different
  6. Conformational Isomers compare the state of eclipse of 2 connected chiral carbons; 4 types + 3 ring configurations; general rules
    • In decreasing amounts of torsional strain (increasing stability):
    • syn-periplanar - bulky groups eclipse each other
    • anticlinal eclipsed - bulky groups eclipse H
    • Gauche - bulky groups staggered @ 60o
    • Anti - bulky groups staggered @ 180o
    • 3 ring conformations in increasing stability:
    • Boat - everything is eclipsed
    • Twist boat - not completely eclipsed or completely staggered
    • Chair - everything staggered
    • *Technically not isomers because change due to rotation of bonds (not breaking), call them conformers
  7. Light polarization and specific rotation
    • polarized light = all EM fields in one direction
    • optically active chiral centers rotate polarized light left or right (relative)
    • Left rotation: (-) = l = levorotatory
    • Right rotation: (+) = d = dextrorotatory
  8. Steps to determine R(D)/S(L) configuration of a chiral carbon
    • 1) Identify chiral carbon
    • 2) assign group priorities based on the molecular weight of the atoms directly bonded to carbon, then extending outward as necessary
    • 3) rotate lowest priority to the back
    • 4) draw an arrow pointing from highest to lowest priority, arrow turns right = (R), arrow turns left = (S)
  9. Racemic mixtures (definition) and separation
    • Definition: mixture contains equal amounts of both enantiomers (also called racemate)
    • Separation (chemical): convert to diastereomers, separate based on (now) different physical properties, & convert back to enantiomers
    • Separation (biological): Enzymes are highly D/L specific
  10. IR Spectroscopy: Basic features and common group absorption fingerprints
    • Plotted as transmittance vs wavenumber (cm-1, correlates with frequency), dips represent absorbance
    • ~3000 cm-1 usually involves an H atom (O-H, N-H, C-H)
    • <~2000 cm-1 does not involve H (same atoms with higher bond order -> higher wavenumber)
    • 1700 cm-1 = carbonyl
    • 3300 cm-1 is either O-H, N-H, or ΞC-H (broader peaks due to H-bonding means these increase in sharpness left to right)
    • <1300 cm-1 = fingerprint region unique for each compound
  11. Visible Region: Primary colors of light and pigment and the universal indicator
    • Light: Red + Green + Blue -> White (none=black)
    • Pigment (complimentary to light): Yellow + Cyan + Magenta -> Black (none = white)
    • absorption of light -> complimentary color
    • Universal Indicator (for pH): Red (very acidic) -> green (neutral) -> purple (very basic)
  12. UV absorption uses
    • pi bonding and non-bonding electrons absorb UV light and transition to anti-bonding orbitals
    • Conjugated double bonds decrease energy of EM radiation absorbed -> longer wavelengths (closer to visible spectrum)
  13. Mass Spectrometry: Basic principles and Uses
    • Fragment molecule to ions with high energy electrons and separate fragments based on mass/charge (m/e or m/z) ratio by a magnetic field
    • Parent peak: highest m/z ratio, not fragmented
    • Base peak: most abundant species
    • Isotopes: small peaks near real peaks
    • Uses: MW of a molecule, Identify molecule by fragmentation patterns, or Identify heteroatoms by their characteristic isotope ratios
  14. 1H-NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) Spectroscopy: Basic principles
    • Protons spin, in a magnetic field, spin lines up with lowest energy; radiowaves of a specific frequency can excite specific (equivalent) protons to "flip" by absorption called resonance
    • Chemical Shift: (Resonance frequency of absorption) depends on degree of electron shielding (affected by electronegativities of nearby atoms, especially bonded atoms), More shielding (less electronegative neighbor) creates only a small shift and peak appears upfield (to the right) and vice versa
    • Higher numbers of equivalent protons produce 1 signal at height n x signal for one proton
    • measured relative to TMS (tetramethylsilane) standard in ppm
    • Spin-spin splitting occurs when the magnetic fields of neighboring (3 bonds away) protons influence chemical shift -> split into n+1 peaks (n=# of neighboring H+); protons across double bonds split farther
  15. Separations and Purifications: Extraction, Distillation, Chromatography, and Recrystallization
    • Extraction: 2 immiscible liquids (e.g. Organic and Aqueous phases)
    • Distillation: Separate liquids based on boiling point
    • Chromatography: Mobile phase moves along stationary phase dragging solutes along with different affinities (Gas-liquid, Paper, & thin-layer)
    • Recrystallization: make a warm saturated solution and allow to cool -> recrystallize; choose a solvent where solute is soluble at high temps but not cooler temps but impurities are highly soluble at cool temps
  16. Free radical chain reaction mechanism
    • dependent on the presence of free radicals
    • inhibited by antioxidants
    • alkane + halogen + free radical initiator (UV light or Peroxides) -> alkyl halide
    • more subtituted radicals are more stable (3o >2o >1o> methyl) -> substitution will occur at the more substituted carbon
  17. Alcohols: Properties and General Principles
    • Nomenclature: hydroxyl or hydroxy prefix or -ol suffix
    • H-bonding -> higher boiling point, water soluble, Broad IR peak at 3300cm-1
    • R-OH pKa = 15, Ar-OH pKa=10
    • More chain branching -> higher Tm but lower boiling point
  18. Substitution Reactions involving Alcohols
    • R-OH + HX ↔ R-X + H2O
    • SN1: involves a carbocation intermediate (OH leaves as H2O before X- comes in); occurs if stable carbocation can be formed, usually a tertiary carbon center and a protic solvent
    • SN2: involves a transition state where -OH and -X are both partially bonded to central carbon; preferable if carbocation is unstable; usually at a primary carbon center and/or in aprotic but polar solvent
    • Both require a good leaving group
  19. Oxidation Reactions involving Alcohols (central vs terminal, weak vs strong oxidizers)
    • Central -OH: not bonded to a terminal carbon, will be oxidized to a ketone group
    • Terminal -OH: bonded to a terminal carbon, will be oxidized first to an aldehyde (weak oxidizers stop here) then to a carboxylic acid by strong oxidizers like KMnO4 or CrO3
  20. Pinacol Rearrangement in polyhydroxyalcohols
    H2SO4 (acid) and heat cause protonation of R-OH to R-OH2+ which leaves creating a carbocation that will rearrange the methyl (opposite the other -OH) and the other -OH converts to =O (ketone, possibly aldehyde?)
  21. Protection of Alcohols
    • trimethylsilyl group (Cl-SiMe3) + R-OH → R-O-SiMe3
    • Can be unprotected by removal with fluoride, R-O-SiMe3 + F- → R-OH + F-SiMe3
  22. SOCl2 and PBR3 reactions with Alcohols
    • R-OH + SOCl2 → R-Cl (SO2 + HCl)
    • R-OH + PBr3 → R-Br (H3PO3 + R3PO3 + HBr)
    • Replace -OH with halogen
  23. Mesylate and Tosylate ions (Sulfonates) react with Alcohols
    • H3C-SO2-Cl + HO-R → H3C-SO2-O-R (Mesylate)
    • Alcohol + Tosyl chloride (TsCl) → Tosylates
    • Sulfonates (R-SO3-) are good leaving groups
  24. Esterification of Alcohols
    • Acid + Alcohol → Ester
    • R-COOH + HO-R' → R-COO-R'
  25. Inorganic Esters from Alcohols
    • Phosphates and Sulfonates are inorganic esters
    • PBr3 + 3R-OH → H3PO3 + 3 RBr
    • Intermediates are P(OR)3 and H-Br and ionized Br- replaces each R group sequentially
    • SOCl2 + ROH → SO2 + HCl + RCl through a similar mechanism
    • Basically using the ROH as a source of oxygen and switching halogens for oxygen
  26. Nucleophillic attack on an aldehyde or ketone
    • Alcohol + Adehyde -> hemiacetal (1 equivalent) -> acetal (2 equivalents of alcohol); same for hemiketal/ketal
    • Hemiacetal/ketal = C with an -OH and an Ether
    • Acetal/Ketal = C with 2 ethers
  27. Imine/Enamine synthesis from and aldehyde or ketone
    • Primary amine (R-NH2) + aldehyde or ketone ->imine
    • 2o amine (R-NH-R') + aldehyde or ketone -> enamine (R"-C-C=O becomes R"-C=C-N-R&R')
    • Replacing carbonyl with either double bond to N (imine) or single bond to N and double bond to neighboring C (enamine)
  28. Haloform reactions adjacent to a ketone carbonyl
    • ketones + halogen -> halogenation of α-Carbon
    • methyl-ketone + halogen -> haloform (CHX3) + Carboxylate
    • Halogenation can be partial or complete (all H replaced with X, works because neighboring O can temporarily accept the charge if alpha carbon is deprotonated)
    • Second reaction occurs due to nucleophillic attack on carbonyl carbon after complete halogenation of methyl-alpha-C; b/c trihalogenated is a good leaving group
  29. Aldol Condensation of Methyl-Ketone
    • Key feature is the acidic alpha-H+
    • Example: 2 acetaldehyde (HC=OCH3) will condense to HC=O-C=CH-CH3)
    • Deprotonation of acetaldehyde creates nucleophile that attacks carbonyl-C of another acetaldehyde displacing one of the carbonyl bonds to O (creating -OH-) which will leave as water and C will double bond with central C (closer to remaining carbonyl)
  30. 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds, also called active methylene compounds
    • R-C=O-CH2-C=O-R' -> R-COH=CH-C=O-R'
    • This experiences the tautomeric form: R-C=O-CH=COH-R' where each carbonyl is switching between keto- and enol- forms
    • Structure is stabilized by intramolecular H-bonding
  31. Keto-enol Tautomerism
    • Keto is the more stable, predominant form
    • R-CH-C=O-R' (keto) ↔ R-C=COH-R' (Enol)
  32. Organometallic Reagents react with aldehydes/ketones
    • Organometallic compounds create R- in solution which attacks C=O -> R-C-OH
    • Create C-C bonds
    • R-X + Li -> R-Li (and Li-X)
    • R-X + BuLi -> R-Li (and BuX)
    • R-Li + C=O -> R-C-OH (wherever the carbonyl was in the original molecule)
  33. Wolff-Kishner reaction
    • Reduces C=O to -CH2-
    • C=O + H2N-NH2 -> -CH2- + N2
  34. Gringard Reagents
    • Just like organometallics -> R-
    • R-X + Mg -> R-Mg-X
    • R-Mg-X + C=O -> R-C-OH
  35. Aldehydes and Ketones: Nomenclature, Physical Properties, and General Principles
    • Nomenclature: aldehyde suffix -al or -aldehyde; ketones prefix keto- or oxo- suffix -one
    • Physical Properties: C=O is polar, boiling points between alkanes and alcohols/carboxylic acids; IR spectrum 1700 cm-1
    • General Principles: substituents contribute to steric hindrance (bulky groups around C=O block access to electrophillic C and decrease reactivity); alpha-H+ acidity means carbanions are stabilized by resonance; alpha-beta unsaturated carbonyls have resonance structures (nucleophile such as -OH easily added at beta position)
  36. Carboxylic Acids: Nomenclature, Physical Properties, and General Principles
    • Nomenclature: suffix -oic acid, -dioic acid
    • Physical Properties: increased boiling point (H-bonding), soluble in water, IR peaks at 1700 (for C=O) and 3300 (for -OH)
    • General Principles: H-bonding contributes to dimerization, pKa ≃ 5 (weak acid), substituents with an electron withdrawing group are inductive (make acid stronger); Conjugate base is resonance stabilized
  37. Nucleophillic Attack on -COOH
    • Nucleophile + R-COOH -> R-C=O-Nuc
    • Example: peptide bond
  38. Nucleophillic attack by -COOH
    • R-COOH + SOCl2 -> R-C=O-Cl (SO2 + HCl)
    • carboxylic hydroxyl oxygen is a nucleophile and can attack electrophiles like the S in SOCl2 but the resulting chloride ion will attack the electrophillic C and displace the -O-S=O-Cl as SO2 and Cl-
  39. Reduction of -COOH
    Can be reduced to an alcohol by LiAlH4
  40. Decarboxylation of Beta-keto acids
    • Spontaneous in a neutral or basic environment
    • R-C=O-CH2-COO- -> R-CO-=CH2 + CO2 -> R-C=O-CH3 (deprotonates water)
  41. Halogenation at alpha (2) position of a carboxylic acid
    • convert to enolizable form: R-CH2-COOH + PBr3 -> R-CH2-C=OBr
    • Enolize: R-CH=COHBr
    • Halogenation: R-CH=COHBr + Br2 -> R-CHBr-C=O-Br
    • Revert (hydrolysis): R-CHBr-COOH
  42. Substitution at alpha (2) position of a carboxylic acid
    RCOOH + E+ -> substitution at alpha carbon
  43. Acid Derivatives: 4 types, Nomenclature, Example of each, Physical Properties and General Principles
    • Acid Chlorides: -oyl chloride (ex. ethanoyl chloride H3C-C=O-Cl); IR C=O @ ~1800
    • Anhydrides: -oic anhydride (ex. ethanoic anhydride H3C-C=O-O-C=O-CH3); IR 2 C=O as 2 bands between 1700-1800
    • Amides: -amide (ex. N-methyl ethanamide H3C-C=O-NH-Me); IR N-H @ ~3300 and C=O ~1700
    • Esters: -oate (ex. methyl ethanoate H3C-C=O-O-Me); IR C=O @ 1700 and Ether (C-O) ~1200
    • Physical Properties: C=O dipole interactions (no H-bonding w/o polar H) but still increase boiling point, Amides also H-bond b/c N-H group (like peptide backbone)
    • Relative Reactivity: Acid Chloride (halides are a good leaving group) >Anhydride >Esters >Amides (peptide bonds, most stable b/c NR2- is a terrible leaving group and C-N partial double bond character)
    • Steric Effects: bulky groups around C=O help protect from nucleophillic attack
    • Electronic Effects: groups (like COO-) that redistribute and stabilize negative charges are good leaving groups, why anhydrides >esters
    • Strain: C-N bond cannot rotate (high strain in a ring); ex. beta-lactam is a 4 member ring with 1 amide and high strain
  44. Preparation of Acid Chloride
    • R-COOH + SOCl2 -> R-C=O-Cl
    • *see nucleophillic attack by -COOH
  45. Preparation of Anhydride (2 ways)
    • Heat: R-COOH + R'-COOH -> Anhydride + H2O
    • Acid chloride + R-COOH + base -> anhydride: R'-C=O-Cl + R-COOH -> R'-C=O-O-C=O-R + HCl
  46. Preparation of an Ester
    • Acid chloride + alcohol + base -> ester
    • R-C=O-Cl + R'-OH + base -> R-C=O-O-R'
    • *Similar to esterification but with acid chloride instead of -COOH
  47. Preparation of an Amide
    • Acid chloride + Amine -> Amide
    • R-C=O-Cl + H2N-R' -> R-C=O-NH-R'
  48. Destruction of Acid Chloride
    Acid chloride + water -> -COOH + HCl
  49. Nucleophillic Substitution on an Acid Derivative
    • R-C=O-X + Nucleophile -> R-C=O-Nuc
    • X=Cl >anhydride >ester >amide (b/c X needs to be a good leaving group)
  50. Hofmann Rearrangement of an Amide
    • Amide loses C=O: R-C=O-NH2 + Br2 + Base -> R-NH2
    • Base deprotonates NH2
    • Br binds negative N
    • Base deprotonates NHBr
    • Br leaves negative N (takes e- with it)
    • Alkyl migration (nucleophillic N with 2 lone pairs of e- attacks carbonyl C, displacing R-C bond to N) creates Isocyanate O=C=N-R
    • Isocyanate + base will pick up OH- then decarboxylate to NH2-R
  51. Transesterification
    • Ester + Alcohol -> new Ester
    • R-C=O-O-R' + HO-R" -> R-C=O-O-R" + R'-OH
    • Alcohol attacks carbonyl C (similar to Acid + Alcohol -> Ester reactions)
  52. Hydrolysis of fats and Glycerides (Saponification)
    • R-C=O-O-R' + NaOH -> R-C=O-O- Na+  + R'OH
    • Splits Triglyceride into glycerol (R'(OH3) + fatty acids
  53. Hydrolysis of Amides
    • Leaving group must be the neutral amine, NOT NH2-
    • R-C=O-NH-R' attacked by OH- becomes R-CO(-)OH-NH-R'
    • C-N electrons leave C for H in water creating R-COOH + H2N-R' and regenerating OH-
  54. Keto acids and esters: Nomenclature & General Principles
    • Alpha-keto acid: (R-C=O-COOH) is 2-oxo acid (ex. alpha-ketopropanoic acid = 2-oxopropanoic acid)
    • Beta-keto acid: (R-C=O-CH2-COOH) is 3-oxo acid
    • Beta (Alpha)-keto esters: R-C=O-CH2-COO-R' is 3 (2) -oxo ester (ex. methyl-beta-ketobutanoate = methyl 3-oxobutanoate)
    • General Principles: hydrogen adjacent to carbonyl group is more acidic and the alpha H of the beta-keto ester is even more acidic between 2 C=O
  55. Decarboxylation of a beta-keto ester
    • beta-keto esters -> beta-keto acids -> enols -> ketos
    • Easy because enol stabilizes rxn intermediate (not so for alpha but didn't go in to it in the review)
    • Ester Hydrolysis: R-C=O-CH2-COO-R' (Acid + Heat) -> R-C=O-CH2-COOH
    • Beta-keto-acid decarboxylation: -> R-COH=CH2 + CO2
    • Tautomerism: enol (above) -> R-C=O-CH3 (Keto)
  56. Acetoacetic ester synthesis (condensation)
    • Acetate: H3C-COO-
    • Acetoacetate: H3C-C=O-CH2-COO-
    • Ethylacetate: H3C-C=O-OEt abstract acidic H+ by base -> H2C=COH-OEt resonates to H2C--C=O-OEt which reacts with ethylacetate (carbanion attacks electrophillic ester C) to displace OEt -> H3C-C=O-CH2-C=O-OEt
    • You can use acetoacetic ester to make C-C bonds: H3C-C=O-CH2-C=O-OEt + R-X (R- substitutes on to CH2 in between 2 carbonyls); hydrolysis removes EtOH to make H3C-C=O-CRH-COOH; decarboxylation -> H3C-C=O-CH2-R + CO2
  57. Amines: Nomenclature, Stereochemistry, Physical Properties
    • Nomenclature: prefix amino- (ex. 2-amino propanoic acid) or suffix -amine (ex. propanamine)
    • Stereochemistry: tertiary amines can be chiral but always racemic due to spontaneous inversions at room temp, quaternary amines stay chiral (no inversions)
    • IR: primary R-NH2 = 2 N-H = 2 peaks ~3300; secondary R-NH-R' = 1 N-H = 1 peak ~3300; tertiary R3N = no N-H = no peak @ 3300
  58. Amide formation (peptide bond)
    • Amine + acid (or derivative with a good leaving group) -> amide
    • R-COOH + H2N-R' -> R-C=O-NH-R'
  59. Aromatic amine reacts with nitrous acid
    • Ar-NH2 + HONO -> Ar-N2+ + H2O + OH-
    • * N's are triple bonded, + is localized near the aromatic ring due to 4th bond
  60. Alkylation of an Amine (or polyalkylation)
    • R-CH2-X + H2N-R' (+ base) -> R'-NH-R + HX
    • Polyalkylation can add 2 or even 3 (making 4 bonds and a positive charge)
  61. Hofmann Elimination and Amines
    • Amine + Methyl iodide -> exhaustive methylation of the amine (3 Me and a positive charge) -> fully methylated amine is a good leaving group
    • 2-amino butane + MeI -> 2-(N(Me)3)-butane -> 1-butene
  62. Amines: General Principles
    • Basic: like to gain a proton, difficult for neutral amines to lose a proton, amides can lose a proton b/c carbonyl contributes to a resonance structure that places the negative on oxygen
    • Stabilize adjacent carbocations: donates its lone pair to adjacent carbocation
    • Substituents: aromatic amines with e- donating groups (e.g. -OH) are even more basic, Ar-NH2 with e- withdrawing groups (e.g. NO2 +) are less basic, steric effectscan reduce basicity because protonated amines are bigger which increases steric interactions, aromatic amines are weaker bases than aliphatic
Author
sjernst
ID
273233
Card Set
MCAT Organic Chemistry
Description
Everything that would reasonably fit in a card set on naming organic compounds, stereochemistry, and the important reactions of different species (no diagrams)
Updated