Term
unequal sharing of electrons gives a bond.... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the shifting of electrons in a bond in response to the electronegativity of nearby atoms |
|
|
Term
what are the units of electronegativity? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what is the tilting point, so to speak, for when a bond stops being polar covalent and starts just being ionic? |
|
Definition
if the electronegativity difference between the participating atoms is greater than 2, it's ionic. |
|
|
Term
electrostatic potential map |
|
Definition
shows calculated charge distributions over a molecule; red is electron-rich, blue is electron-poor |
|
|
Term
polarity of molecules (magnitude and direction of the dipole moment) depends on... |
|
Definition
the vector sum of individual dipoles |
|
|
Term
what are the units of dipole moments? |
|
Definition
debyes - measure of the charge (in coulombs, Q) at one end of the molecular dipole times the distance between the two charges |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
an electron that participates in resonance - it doesn't actually move, just takes part in a "hybrid" structure |
|
|
Term
bronsted-lowry base vs. lewis base |
|
Definition
bronsted: acid donates H+ in solution, base accepts it lewis: base donates electron pair, acid accepts electron pair |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
lone pair from a base attacks and acid; the base becomes PROTONATED |
|
|
Term
what is the equation for the equilibrium constant reaction? |
|
Definition
[product][product]/[reactant][reactant] |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
acid equilibrium constant; the larger, the stronger the acid [H+][A]/[HA]= Ka |
|
|
Term
a strong acid will have a ______ Ka and a ______ pKa |
|
Definition
a strong acid will have a HIGH Ka and a LOW pKa (-logKa) |
|
|
Term
to react with an organic compound, the pKa of the opposing acid must be.... |
|
Definition
stronger (more negative, lower) than the pKa of the base |
|
|
Term
what makes for a strong acid? |
|
Definition
a stable conjugate base; this can be caused by resonance, charge on electronegative ion, H being one away from electronegative ion, or being on a multiple bond |
|
|
Term
factors that influence acidity: |
|
Definition
1. acidity increases with weight of the group H is holding on to - increases towards the RIGHT and DOWN on the periodic table - S-H is a strong acid 2. inductive effect (H on or near an electronegative ion) 3. resonance 4. multiple bonds = stronger acid |
|
|
Term
three things that are lewis acids |
|
Definition
- metal cations - species with unfilled orbitals (like BF3) - electrophiles |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
induced dipole-induced dipole intermolecular forces |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a carbonyl with one side of the C bonded to a nitrogen |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a carbonyl with one side of the carbon bonded to a chlorine |
|
|
Term
as you add more carbons to an alkane, boiling point goes __________ because.... as you add more substituants to an alkane, boiling point goes __________ because.... |
|
Definition
as you add more carbons to an alkane, boiling point goes UP because there are more intermolecular (van der Waals) forces holding them together. but as you add more substituants, they don't fit together well, so boiling point goes DOWN. |
|
|
Term
from what factors does ring strain derive in cycloalkenes, and what do larger alkenes do to alleviate it? |
|
Definition
ring strain- loss of planarity, the carbon can't assume a tetrahedral angle; bigger rings can pucker to reduce strain. |
|
|
Term
how do you tell how much strain a given molecule is under? |
|
Definition
you burn it and measure the heat - the more heat it gives off, the more strain it was under |
|
|
Term
describe cis and trans decalin |
|
Definition
two fused cyclohexane rings; cis decalin has the two hydrogens at the fuse on the same side; this causes the rings to be held almost at right angles to each other, keeps them from ring-flipping, and is very unstable. Trans-decalin has the fusion hydrogens trans to each other, and the basic shape is more or less planar, and MUCH more stable (although it also doesn't flip) |
|
|
Term
molecules with n chirality centers have how many stereoisomers? |
|
Definition
2n
(ex: 3 chirality centers, nine stereoisomers) |
|
|
Term
enantiomers that differ in some (but not all!) chirality centers; molecules that differ in ONLY ONE chirality centers; molecules that differ in ALL chirality centers |
|
Definition
1. diastereomers
2. epimers
3. enantiomers
|
|
|
Term
how does one seperate a racemic mixture? |
|
Definition
by using a chiral reagant |
|
|
Term
chirality of nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus |
|
Definition
even though these are tetrahedral, they do NOT form chiral centers because they flip too rapidly. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
molecule that is achiral but can become chiral by a single alteration |
|
|
Term
how do you tell if a hydrogen on a prochiral molecule is pro-R or pro-S? |
|
Definition
exchange the hydrogen for something exactly one unit heavier (deuterium!) then find chirality. If the hypothetical chirality is R, the hydrogen is pro-R, and vice versa |
|
|
Term
what are the four types of reactions and what happens in them? |
|
Definition
- additions (usually alkene to alkane - adding something on)
- eliminations (usually alkane to alkene - removing something)
- substitutions (the reactants exchange substituants) - rearrangements (exactly what it sounds like) |
|
|
Term
homolytic vs. heterolytic cleavage |
|
Definition
homolytic: a bond breaking symmetrically, resulting in radicals
heterolytic: bond breaks, but both electrons go to one fragment |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the ability of a molecule to have its electrons pushed around; LARGER molecules are more polarizable |
|
|
Term
a large equilibrium constant means.... |
|
Definition
the reaction is very favored to go to the product side. It does NOT say ANYTHING about how fast the reaction is. |
|
|
Term
relate Gibbs free energy, the equilibrium constant, enthalpy, and entropy in one equation |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the energy required to break a bond into two radical fragments when in the gas phase at 25C |
|
|
Term
two reasons for more-highly sub'd carbocation stability |
|
Definition
- hyperconjugation (empty p orbital stabilized by properly oriented pi electrons)
- inductive effect - more polarizable groups nearby distribute and stabilize electrons |
|
|
Term
to display a magnetic field/dipole, an atom must have: |
|
Definition
- odd number of protons
- odd number of neutrons
either one - NOT both (then will be even) |
|
|
Term
quantization and spin states of nuclei |
|
Definition
spin number is quantized and known as "l". In 13C and 1H, l = 1/2. Number of possible spin orientations is 2l+1. Therefore for 13C and 1H, there are two possible spin orientations - parallel and antiparallel. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the applied magnetic field to get electrons to polarize |
|
|
Term
energy required to resonate nucleus in NMR |
|
Definition
varies based on the nature of the atom and also on the magnitude of the Bo (larger Bo is, larger energy has to be)
based on Planck's law -> E = hv where h is a constant and v is frequency |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
x-axis: strength felt by nucleus
y-axis: old ones measure intensity of signal, we measure time to decay |
|
|
Term
why are 13C and 1H NMR measured on different scales? |
|
Definition
because of the different energy requirements to bring them into resonance |
|
|
Term
what is an appropriate solvent for NMR? |
|
Definition
something with deuterium, so it doesn't give off a signal |
|
|
Term
two factors that influence chemical shift (make the signal go downfield) |
|
Definition
1. electronegativity of nearby atoms
2. sp2 hybridization also deshields
- both of these together, like in a carbonyl group, is VERY low field. |
|
|
Term
what is a problem with doing 13C NMR and how is it addressed? |
|
Definition
low natural abundance causes a lot of background noise, which is solved by running multiple scans |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
are chemically the same and would give the same signals |
|
|
Term
if replacing a hydrogen would result in a chirality center, the hydrogen is.... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
if you removed one, it would make a chirality center; AND the molecule already has a chirality center! these hydrogens give different signals from each other |
|
|
Term
how do you find pKa of an acid when given pH and molar concentrations? |
|
Definition
pH = pKa + log [base/acid] |
|
|
Term
vinylic carbon vs. allylic carbon |
|
Definition
vinylic: has a double bond
allylic: one away from a double bonded carbon |
|
|
Term
why are trans isomers more stable than cis isomers? |
|
Definition
cis isomers have steric strain between the substituent groups |
|
|
Term
why do alkenes react well in addition reactions? (to become alkanes) |
|
Definition
1. their products are lower in energy than their reactants
2. the electrons in the pi bonds are "exposed" and susceptible to reaction
3. alkenes are nucleophiles, so they donate electrons |
|
|
Term
structure of carbocations |
|
Definition
trigonal planar - sp2 hybridized |
|
|
Term
two things that contribute to carbocation stability |
|
Definition
large EDGs - bigger alkyl groups are more polarizable and donate more electrons to the positively charged carbocation
hyperconjugation - empty p orbital interacts with properly oriented H-C sigma bonds |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the physical structure of a transition state most closely resembles its most stable neighbor (energetically) - explains why more substituted carbocations form faster - TS is lower in energy and so moves faster! |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
x: effective strength felt by nucleus
y: intensity of signal |
|
|
Term
why do 1H and 13C have different scales? |
|
Definition
because of the different rf values needed to bring them into resonance |
|
|
Term
what is an appropriate solvent for NMR? |
|
Definition
one which doesn't give off a signal, like DCCl3, which has a deuterium |
|
|
Term
how do you measure chemical shift in ppm? |
|
Definition
distance from TMS signal (Hz) / instrument frequency (Hz) |
|
|
Term
how does hybridization influence chemical shift? |
|
Definition
sp3 is more upfield than sp2 (sp2 is less shielded) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Distortion Enhancement by Polarization Transfer - does three scans:
1. broadband decoupled is a normal 13C showing all carbon shifts
2. DEPT-90 shows CH only
3. DEPT-135 shows CH and CH3 as positive and CH2 as negative |
|
|
Term
three kinds of polymerization; when is each most likely to happen? |
|
Definition
- radical polymerization (default)
- acid-catalyzed (when there is an EDG to stabilize the carbocation)
- base-catalyzed (when there is an EWG to stabilize the carbanion) |
|
|
Term
three stereospecific polymerizations |
|
Definition
- isotacting means everything is on the same side
- syndiotactic means alternatic sides
- atactic means random placement |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
enables you to control polymerization (getting isotactic or syndiotactic) by using TiCl3 and Al-Cldiethyl; exploiting that surface AlCl3 has only 5 Cl attached |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
takes an alcohol and uses SN2 to replace with halide, reversing stereochem; then us an ox agent to replace with OH again but DONT use SN2, and you'll get the opposite stereochemistry you had before! |
|
|
Term
what are three things reaction rate is based on? |
|
Definition
- relevant concentrations
- temperature
- ΔG‡ |
|
|
Term
what does rate law depend on? |
|
Definition
mechanism - therefore it can only be determined experimentally |
|
|
Term
when ranking SN2 substrates, which is LESS reactive - a primary halide whose carbon is attached to a quartenary carbon, or a secondary carbon?
|
|
Definition
the primary carbon attached to a tertiary carbon is less reactive even than a secondary carbon! |
|
|
Term
what are two substrates on which SN2 will NEVER occur? |
|
Definition
aryle halide or vinylic halide - Nu: physically can't get in from behind |
|
|
Term
what makes for a good leaving group? |
|
Definition
species that can best stable negative charge (larger halogens, say) |
|
|
Term
what does a polar protic solvent do to an SN2 reaction? |
|
Definition
forms a solvation shell around Nu:, stabilizing it and increating AE |
|
|
Term
how do the four factors of interest in SN2 reactions affect the reaction in terms of mechanics/energy? |
|
Definition
1. using a protic solvent will lower the energy of the Nu:, increasing AE, so we use an aprotic one to raise the Nu: energy
2. using a highly substituted substrate requires more energy to overcome the steric strain, raising the TS and the AE
3. using a bad leaving group requires more energy to get rid of it, raising TS and AE
4. using a very charged nucleophile - high energy of Nu: means TS is easier to achieve/AE is lower |
|
|
Term
why do you need a polar solvent for SN2? |
|
Definition
polar solvents will dissolve salts but won't for a solvation shell to stabilize Nu: |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
in elimination reactions, the more substituted alkene product will form (more substituted double bond) |
|
|
Term
how could you tell that an elimination was E2 or E1 without looking at any of the conditions? |
|
Definition
Deuterium isotope effect - in E2, having a D instead of an H will slow the reaction, because E2 is a one step reaction and therefore breaking the stronger C-D bond is part of the rate-limiting step. In E1 there are two steps, and breaking the D-C bond isn't the rate limiting one, so it won't slow the reaction at all |
|
|
Term
what are two reasons why E2 happens in antiperiplanar geometry rather than synperiplanar? |
|
Definition
1. synperiplanar has tons of steric strain so it's very high in energy
2. in synperiplanar the leaving group will repel the Nu: |
|
|
Term
why must the E2 reaction happen with periplanar geometry? |
|
Definition
to allow the sp3 orbitals to overlap (need this to form a double bond in a single step) |
|
|
Term
what does mass spec measure, exactly? |
|
Definition
mass/charge ratio; practically, charge is usually 1 so gives mass |
|
|
Term
what do you get when you hit an organic molecule with an electron in mass spec? |
|
Definition
|
|