The Basics of Organic Chemistry
When you explore biology, you’ll find that many processes are constantly occurring in living organisms. The study of organic chemistry — which focuses on carbon molecules — is central to all living organisms.
The ability to convert ingested fuel to usable
energy is what differentiates a living organism from a dead one. The
ingested fuel contains a variety of large molecules (macromolecules)
that get broken down. When the macromolecules have been broken down into
their smallest parts, they can enter the cells, which contain more
macromolecules, which are involved in more processes.
What is organic chemistry?
In organic chemistry, the focus is on the element carbon. Carbon is central to all living organisms; however, thousands of nonliving things (such as drugs, plastics, and dyes) are made from carbon compounds. Diamonds are carbon atoms in a crystal structure. Diamonds are so hard because the atoms of carbon are so closely bonded together in the crystal form. That same ability to pack closely together makes carbon an excellent structural element in its other forms as well.One atom of carbon can combine with up to four other atoms. Therefore, organic compounds usually are large and can have several atoms and molecules bonded together. Organic molecules can be large, and they comprise the structural components of living organisms: carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids.
Carbon is key
In their outer shells, carbon atoms have four electrons that can bond with other atoms. When carbon is bonded to hydrogen (which is common in organic molecules), the carbon atom shares an electron with hydrogen, and hydrogen likewise shares an electron with carbon. Carbon-hydrogen molecules are referred to as hydrocarbons. Nitrogen, sulfur, and oxygen also are often joined to carbon in living organisms.Long carbon chains = low reactivity
Large molecules form when carbon atoms are joined together in a straight line or in rings. The longer the carbon chain, the less chemically reactive the compound is. However, in biology, other measures of reactivity are used. One example is enzymatic activity, which refers to how much more quickly a certain molecule can allow a reaction to occur.
One key to knowing that a compound is less reactive is
that its melting and boiling points are high. Generally, the lower a
compound’s melting and boiling points, the more reactive it is. For
example, the hydrocarbon methane, which is the primary component of
natural gas, has just one carbon and four hydrogen atoms. Because it is
the shortest carbon compound, it has the lowest boiling point (-162°C)
and is a gas at room temperature. It is highly reactive.
On the other hand, a compound made of an extremely long carbon chain
has a boiling point of 174°C (compared to water, which has a boiling
point of 100°C). Because it takes so much more for it to boil, it is
much less reactive and is not gaseous at room temperature.Forming functional groups based on properties
In organic chemistry, molecules that have similar properties (whether they are chemical or physical properties) are grouped together. The reason they have similar properties is because they have similar groups of atoms; these groups of atoms are called functional groups.
Chemical properties involve one
substance changing into another substance by reacting. An example of a
chemical property is the ability of chlorine gas to react explosively
when mixed with sodium. The chemical reaction creates a new substance,
sodium chloride (table salt). Physical properties refer to
different forms of a substance, but the substance remains the same; no
chemical reaction or change to a new substance occurs.
Some of the properties that the functional groups provide include
polarity and acidity. For example, the functional group called carboxyl
(-COOH) is a weak acid. Polarity refers to one end of a molecule having a charge (polar), and the other end having no charge (nonpolar). For example, the plasma membrane
has hydrophilic heads on the outside that are polar, and the
hydrophobic tails (which are nonpolar) form the inside of the plasma
membrane.
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