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Chapter 21- An Introduction to Organic Chemistry

  • All organic compounds contain carbon. However, not all compounds containing carbon are organic.

  • Organic compounds may have hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur etc in addition to carbon.

  • Compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen only are called hydrocarbons.

HOMOLOGOUS SERIES AND FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

  • A homologous series is a family of organic compounds with similar chemical properties.

  • Compounds of the same homologous series contain the same functional group.

  • A functional group is an atom or a group of atoms that give the molecule its characteristic properties.

  • The general characteristics of the homologous series are: same functional group, similar chemical properties, and gradual change in physical properties.

NAMING ORGANIC COMPOUNDS

  • Names of organic compounds are divided into two parts: a prefix that tells the total number of carbon atoms in the compound, and the suffix that names the homologous series of the compound.

  • Prefixes: meth- (one), eth- (two), prop- (three), but- (four)

  • Suffixes: -ane (alkane), -ene (alkene), -ol (alcohol), -oic acid (carboxylic acid)

FRACTIONAL DISTILLATION

  • Petroleum is a mixture of hydrocarbons that are separated by fractional distillation due to the difference in boiling points.

  • The crude oil is heated. At different boiling points, different factions boil over.

  • Factions from first to last: refinery gas, gasoline, naptha, kerosine, lubricating oil, bitumen.

USES OF FACTIONS

  • Petroleum gas: heating and cooking.

  • Gasoline: fuel for car engines.

  • Naptha: feedstock for chemical industry.

  • Kerosine (paraffin): fuel for aircraft engines.

  • Diesel oil: fuel for diesel engines.

  • Lubricating oil: lubricating machines.

  • Bitumen: paving road surfaces.

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Chapter 21- An Introduction to Organic Chemistry

  • All organic compounds contain carbon. However, not all compounds containing carbon are organic.

  • Organic compounds may have hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur etc in addition to carbon.

  • Compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen only are called hydrocarbons.

HOMOLOGOUS SERIES AND FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

  • A homologous series is a family of organic compounds with similar chemical properties.

  • Compounds of the same homologous series contain the same functional group.

  • A functional group is an atom or a group of atoms that give the molecule its characteristic properties.

  • The general characteristics of the homologous series are: same functional group, similar chemical properties, and gradual change in physical properties.

NAMING ORGANIC COMPOUNDS

  • Names of organic compounds are divided into two parts: a prefix that tells the total number of carbon atoms in the compound, and the suffix that names the homologous series of the compound.

  • Prefixes: meth- (one), eth- (two), prop- (three), but- (four)

  • Suffixes: -ane (alkane), -ene (alkene), -ol (alcohol), -oic acid (carboxylic acid)

FRACTIONAL DISTILLATION

  • Petroleum is a mixture of hydrocarbons that are separated by fractional distillation due to the difference in boiling points.

  • The crude oil is heated. At different boiling points, different factions boil over.

  • Factions from first to last: refinery gas, gasoline, naptha, kerosine, lubricating oil, bitumen.

USES OF FACTIONS

  • Petroleum gas: heating and cooking.

  • Gasoline: fuel for car engines.

  • Naptha: feedstock for chemical industry.

  • Kerosine (paraffin): fuel for aircraft engines.

  • Diesel oil: fuel for diesel engines.

  • Lubricating oil: lubricating machines.

  • Bitumen: paving road surfaces.