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Organic Chemistry Exam Study Guide: Stereochemistry, Reaction Mechanisms, and Physical Properties

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Stereochemistry

Chirality and Enantiomers

Stereochemistry is the study of the spatial arrangement of atoms in molecules and its effect on their chemical behavior. Chirality is a property of a molecule that is not superimposable on its mirror image, leading to the existence of enantiomers.

  • Chiral Center: A carbon atom bonded to four different groups.

  • Enantiomers: Non-superimposable mirror images; have identical physical properties except for their interaction with plane-polarized light and reactions in chiral environments.

  • R/S Configuration: The Cahn-Ingold-Prelog priority rules are used to assign absolute configuration to chiral centers.

  • Meso Compound: An achiral compound with multiple chiral centers and an internal plane of symmetry.

Example: (S)-Serine is an amino acid with a chiral center at the alpha carbon.

Formula: To determine the number of possible stereoisomers: , where is the number of chiral centers.

Optical Activity

Chiral molecules can rotate plane-polarized light. The direction and magnitude of rotation are characteristic of each enantiomer.

  • Dextrorotatory (+): Rotates light clockwise.

  • Levorotatory (−): Rotates light counterclockwise.

  • Racemic Mixture: Contains equal amounts of both enantiomers; optically inactive.

Formula: % enantiomer calculation using specific rotation:

Reaction Mechanisms

SN1 and SN2 Reactions

Substitution reactions are classified as SN1 (unimolecular) or SN2 (bimolecular) based on their mechanisms.

  • SN2: One-step, concerted mechanism; rate depends on both substrate and nucleophile (); inversion of configuration occurs.

  • SN1: Two-step mechanism; rate depends only on substrate (); racemization occurs due to planar carbocation intermediate.

  • Best Solvents: SN2 favors polar aprotic solvents (e.g., DMSO), SN1 favors polar protic solvents.

  • Allyl Halides: SN2 reactions are facilitated by resonance stabilization in allyl halides.

Example: Allyl bromide reacts faster in SN2 than primary alkyl bromide due to resonance stabilization.

Free Radical Reactions

Free radical halogenation involves initiation, propagation, and termination steps.

  • Initiation: Formation of radicals (e.g., Cl2 → 2Cl•).

  • Propagation: Radicals react with substrate to form new radicals.

  • Termination: Two radicals combine to form a stable molecule.

Example: Chlorination of ethane with UV light produces ethyl chloride and HCl.

Reaction Energy Diagrams

Energy diagrams illustrate the energy changes during a chemical reaction, including activation energy and enthalpy change.

  • Activation Energy (Ea): Energy required to reach the transition state.

  • Enthalpy Change (ΔH): Difference in energy between reactants and products.

  • Exothermic Reaction: ΔH is negative; products are lower in energy than reactants.

Formula:

Physical Properties and Trends

Boiling Points of Organic Compounds

Boiling point depends on molecular weight, intermolecular forces, and branching.

  • Hydrogen Bonding: Increases boiling point (e.g., alcohols).

  • Branching: Decreases boiling point due to reduced surface area.

  • Halides: Boiling point increases with molecular weight and decreases with branching.

Example: Among alkyl halides, n-butyl chloride has a higher boiling point than tert-butyl chloride.

Thermodynamics and Kinetics

Gibbs Free Energy (ΔG), Entropy (ΔS), and Enthalpy (ΔH)

Thermodynamic parameters determine the spontaneity and equilibrium of reactions.

  • Gibbs Free Energy:

  • Spontaneity: Negative ΔG indicates a spontaneous reaction.

  • Equilibrium Constant (Keq):

  • Entropy (ΔS): Measures disorder; contributes more to ΔG at higher temperatures.

Example: If Keq < 1, reactants are favored at equilibrium.

Functional Groups and Nomenclature

Alkyl Halides and Ethers

Alkyl halides are organic compounds containing halogen atoms bonded to sp3 carbon. Ethers are compounds with an oxygen atom connected to two alkyl or aryl groups.

  • Naming Alkyl Halides: Name the alkyl group followed by the halide (e.g., isobutyl chloride).

  • Crown Ethers: Cyclic ethers with multiple oxygen atoms; 16-crown-4 ether contains 16 atoms in the ring and 4 oxygen atoms.

Example: 16-crown-4 ether is used as a phase-transfer catalyst.

Special Topics

Carbenes

Carbenes are neutral species with a divalent carbon atom and two nonbonded electrons.

  • Structure: :CH2 (methylene carbene)

  • Reactivity: Highly reactive intermediates in organic reactions.

Stereoisomer Classification

Stereoisomers are compounds with the same connectivity but different spatial arrangement.

  • Enantiomers: Non-superimposable mirror images.

  • Diastereomers: Stereoisomers that are not mirror images.

  • Constitutional Isomers: Different connectivity of atoms.

  • Identical: Same compound.

Selected Comparison Table

SN1 vs SN2 Reaction Characteristics

Feature

SN1

SN2

Mechanism

Two-step (carbocation intermediate)

One-step (concerted)

Rate Law

Stereochemistry

Racemization

Inversion

Solvent

Polar protic

Polar aprotic

Substrate

3° > 2° > 1°

1° > 2° > 3°

Practice Applications

  • Assigning R/S configurations to chiral centers.

  • Predicting products and mechanisms for substitution and elimination reactions.

  • Calculating selectivity in free radical halogenation.

  • Drawing reaction energy diagrams and labeling enthalpy changes.

  • Classifying stereoisomers and identifying meso compounds.

Additional info: Some context and definitions have been expanded for clarity and completeness, including formulas and examples relevant to the exam questions.

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