THE NAMES OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
This page explains how to write the formula for an organic compound
given its name - and vice versa. It covers alkanes, cycloalkanes,
alkenes, simple compounds containing halogens, alcohols, aldehydes and
ketones. At the bottom of the page, you will find links to other types
of compound. Background How this page is going to tackle the problem There are two skills you have to develop in this area:
So, we're going to look mainly at how you decode names and turn them into formulae. In the process you will also pick up tips about how to produce names yourself. In the early stages of an organic chemistry course people frequently get confused and daunted by the names because they try to do too much at once. Don't try to read all these pages in one go. Just go as far as the compounds you are interested in at the moment and ignore the rest. Come back to them as they arise during the natural flow of your course. Cracking the code A modern organic name is simply a code. Each part of the name gives you some useful information about the compound. For example, to understand the name 2-methylpropan-1-ol you need to take the name to pieces. The prop in the middle tells you how many carbon atoms there are in the longest chain (in this case, 3). The an which follows the "prop" tells you that there aren't any carbon-carbon double bonds. The other two parts of the name tell you about interesting things which are happening on the first and second carbon atom in the chain. Any name you are likely to come across can be broken up in this same way. Counting the carbon atoms You will need to remember the codes for the number of carbon atoms in a chain up to 6 carbons. There is no easy way around this - you have got to learn them. If you don't do this properly, you won't be able to name anything!
Whether or not the compound contains a carbon-carbon double bond is shown by the two letters immediately after the code for the chain length.
Propene means three carbons in a chain with a double bond between two of the carbons. Alkyl groups Compounds like methane, CH4, and ethane, CH3CH3, are members of a family of compounds called alkanes. If you remove a hydrogen atom from one of these you get an alkyl group. For example:
Types of compounds The alkanes Example 1: Write the structural formula for 2-methylpentane. Start decoding the name from the bit that counts the number of carbon atoms in the longest chain - pent counts 5 carbons. Are there any carbon-carbon double bonds? No - an tells you there aren't any. Now draw this carbon skeleton:
Start with the carbon backbone. There are 4 carbons in the longest chain (but) with no carbon-carbon double bonds (an). | |||||||||||||||||||||
Note: Does it matter whether you draw the two methyl groups one up and one down, or both up, or both down? Not in the least! If you aren't sure about drawing organic molecules, follow this link before you go on. Use the BACK button on your browser to return to this page. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Example 3: Write the structural formula for 2,2-dimethylbutane. This is exactly like the last example, except that both methyl groups are on the same carbon atom. Notice that the name shows this by using 2,2- as well as di. The structure is worked out as before: hexan shows a 6 carbon chain with no carbon-carbon double bonds. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Note: Once again it doesn't matter whether the ethyl and methyl groups point up or down. You might also have chosen to start numbering from the right-hand end of the chain. These would all be perfectly valid structures. All you would have done is to rotate the whole molecule in space, or rotate it around particular bonds. If you aren't sure about this, then you must read about drawing organic molecules before you go on. | |||||||||||||||||||||
If you had to name this yourself: How do you know what order to write the different alkyl groups at the beginning of the name? The convention is that you write them in alphabetical order - hence ethyl comes before methyl which in turn comes before propyl. The cycloalkanes In a cycloalkane the carbon atoms are joined up in a ring - hence cyclo. Example: Write the structural formula for cyclohexane. hexan shows 6 carbons with no carbon-carbon double bonds. cyclo shows that they are in a ring. Drawing the ring and putting in the correct number of hydrogens to satisfy the bonding requirements of the carbons gives: Example 1: Write the structural formula for propene. prop counts 3 carbon atoms in the longest chain. en tells you that there is a carbon-carbon double bond. That means that the carbon skeleton looks like this: but counts 4 carbon atoms in the longest chain and en tells you that there is a carbon-carbon double bond. The number in the name tells you where the double bond starts. No number was necessary in the propene example above because the double bond has to start on one of the end carbon atoms. In the case of butene, though, the double bond could either be at the end of the chain or in the middle - and so the name has to code for the its position. The carbon skeleton is: The longest chain has got 6 carbon atoms (hex) with a double bond starting on the second one (-2-en). But this time there is a methyl group attached to the chain on the number 3 carbon atom, giving you the underlying structure: Compounds containing halogens Example 1: Write the structural formula for 1,1,1-trichloroethane. This is a two carbon chain (eth) with no double bonds (an). There are three chlorine atoms all on the first carbon atom. First sort out the carbon skeleton. It's a three carbon chain with no double bonds and a methyl group on the second carbon atom. Notice that the whole of the hydrocarbon part of the name is written together - as methylpropane - before you start adding anything else on to the name. Example 2: Write the structural formula for 1-iodo-3-methylpent-2-ene. This time the longest chain has 5 carbons (pent), but has a double bond starting on the number 2 carbon. There is also a methyl group on the number 3 carbon. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Note: You could equally well draw this molecule the other way round, but normally where you have, say, 1-bromo-something, you tend to write the bromine (or other halogen) on the right-hand end of the structure. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Alcohols All alcohols contain an -OH group. This is shown in a name by the ending ol. Example 1: Write the structural formula for methanol. This is a one carbon chain with no carbon-carbon double bond (obviously!). The ol ending shows it's an alcohol and so contains an -OH group. The carbon skeleton is a 3 carbon chain with no carbon-carbon double bonds, but a methyl group on the number 2 carbon. This is a two carbon chain with no double bond. The diol shows 2 -OH groups, one on each carbon atom. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Note: There's no particular significance in the fact that this formula has the carbon chain drawn vertically. If you draw it horizontally, unless you stretch the carbon-carbon bond a lot, the -OH groups look very squashed together. Drawing it vertically makes it look tidier! |
Thursday, 5 September 2013
THE NAMES OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
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