BackOrganic Chemistry Course Syllabus and Topic Overview
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Organic Chemistry Course Syllabus Overview
Course Structure and Main Topics
This syllabus outlines the sequence of topics covered in a college-level organic chemistry course, referencing Loudon 5/e textbook sections and associated homework assignments. The course covers advanced organic chemistry concepts, including organometallic compounds, spectroscopy, aromatic chemistry, carbonyl compounds, and biomolecules.
Organometallic Compounds: Introduction to Grignard reagents and organolithium reagents, their synthesis, and reactivity.
Spectroscopy: UV-vis spectroscopy of conjugated π systems and arenes, as well as spectroscopy of carbonyl compounds and carboxylic acids.
Aromatic Chemistry: Structure and reactions of benzene and arenes, including hydrogenation, electrophilic aromatic substitution (EAS), and reactions at the benzylic position.
Carbonyl Chemistry: Synthesis and reactions of aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and their derivatives.
Enols and Enolates: Formation, reactivity, and applications in organic synthesis.
Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: Study of amides, nitriles, and other derivatives, including their synthesis and reactions.
Amines and Amino Acids: Structure, synthesis, and reactivity of amines, amino acids, and polypeptides.
Aryl Halides and Phenols: Reactions, coupling mechanisms, and transition metal-catalyzed processes.
Aromatic Heterocycles: Structure and chemistry of heterocyclic aromatic compounds.
Detailed Topic Breakdown
Week | Main Topic | Subtopics | Loudon 5/e Sections | Homework |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Organometallic Compounds | Grignard reagents, organolithium reagents | 8.8, 19.9 (pp. 918-920, 963-964) | HW 1 |
2 | Spectroscopy | UV-vis spectroscopy of conjugated π systems | 15.2 (pp. 687-690) | HW 1.5 |
3 | Arenes | Benzene, hydrogenation, benzylic position reactions | 16.6, 17.1-5 | |
4-5 | Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution (EAS) | Mechanisms, regioselectivity | 16.4, 16.5 (pp. 750-776) | |
6 | Spectroscopy & Carbonyl Chemistry | Spectroscopy of conjugated systems and arenes, aldehydes and ketones (syntheses) | 16.3, 19.1, 19.2, 19.4 | HW 2 |
7-8 | Carbonyl Chemistry & Enolate Chemistry | Reactions of aldehydes and ketones, enols and enolates, carboxylic acids (syntheses) | 19.5-8, 19.10-14, 19.3, 22.1-4, 22.8-11, 20.1-4, 20.6 | HW 2.5 |
9-11 | Carboxylic Acids & Derivatives | Reactions, spectroscopy, amides, nitriles | 20.7-11, 22.3.B, 20, 21, 22.3.C | HW 4.0 |
12-13 | Amines & Amino Acids | Structure, synthesis, polypeptides, benzylic carbon reactivity | 23, 26 | HW 4.5, HW 5.0 |
14 | Aryl Halides, Phenols, Coupling Reactions, Aromatic Heterocycles | Transition metal-catalyzed coupling, heterocycles | 18.1, 18.3-4, 18.7-9, 18.5-6, 25.1-4 | HW 6.0, HW 7.0 |
15 | ACS Exam Review | Comprehensive review of all topics |
Key Concepts and Academic Context
Grignard Reagents: Organomagnesium compounds used for nucleophilic addition to carbonyls. Example: Reaction with aldehydes to form secondary alcohols.
Organolithium Reagents: Highly reactive organometallics, useful in C–C bond formation.
UV-Vis Spectroscopy: Analytical technique for studying conjugated π systems; absorption correlates with electronic transitions.
Benzene and Arenes: Aromatic compounds characterized by delocalized π electrons; undergo substitution rather than addition.
Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution (EAS): Mechanism for introducing substituents onto aromatic rings. General equation:
Carbonyl Compounds: Aldehydes and ketones are central to organic synthesis; undergo nucleophilic addition and oxidation-reduction reactions.
Enols and Enolates: Tautomeric forms and reactive intermediates in carbonyl chemistry. Enolate formation:
Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives: Includes esters, amides, anhydrides, and nitriles; important in biological and synthetic chemistry.
Amines and Amino Acids: Nitrogen-containing compounds; amino acids are building blocks of proteins.
Aryl Halides and Phenols: Undergo unique substitution and coupling reactions, often catalyzed by transition metals.
Aromatic Heterocycles: Compounds with heteroatoms (N, O, S) in the ring; important in pharmaceuticals and biochemistry.
Additional info:
Homework assignments correspond to textbook sections and reinforce lecture material.
Midterm and ACS Exam Review sessions are scheduled for assessment and comprehensive review.
No classes are scheduled on certain dates, as noted in the syllabus.