15 and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

15 and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

  • Predict whether the compound will be aromatic, antiaromatic, or non-aromatic by determining whether Huckel's rule applies to a given structure.
  • Show how to make a system similar to benzene and cyclobutadiene.
  • Predict if a structure will be aromatic.
    • If nitrogen's lone pairs are used in the aromatic system, you can determine whether the nitrogen atom is weakly basic or strongly basic.
  • The structures of aromatic compounds can be determined using IR, NMR, UV, and mass spectrums.
    • Predict the distinguishing features of the compound's spectrum.
  • The breaking strength of Zylon is 1.6 times greater than that of Kevlar.
    • It's highly resistant to stretching and is also heat resistant.
  • The structure is composed of aromatic rings with single bonds.
  • Michael Faraday isolated a pure compound of boiling point 80 degC from the oily mixture that came from illuminating gas.
    • An empirical formula of CH was found in the hydrogen-to-carbon ratio of1:1.
  • The same compound was created in 1834 by heating benzoic acid, isolated from gum benzoin, in the presence of lime.
    • The empirical formula was CH.
  • In the 19th century there were many compounds that were related to benzene.
    • These compounds had low hydrogen-to-carbon ratios and could be converted to benzene.
  • Friedrich Kekule proposed a structure for ben zene with three double bonds.
    • The structure with alternating single and double bonds was considered odd because it was only recently proposed.
  • Only one of the different 1,2-dichlorobenzenes is known to exist.
  • Kekule's hypothesis is that the resonance picture of benzene is natural.
    • The double bonds are longer than the single bonds.
    • The bonds of the benzene ring are the same length as the ring itself.
    • The ring and carbon nuclei are positioned at the same distances, so there is only one difference.
  • Benzene is similar to the two Kekule structures.
  • Because the pi bonds this problem and has a dream in which atoms are delocalized over the ring, we often inscribe a circle in the hexagon.
  • Three double bonds were twisted in a snake-like motion.
    • This representation helps us remember that there is no local and that one of the snakes seized a single or double bond, which prevents us from drawing a different tail.
    • The isomers of Kekule differ in the placement of double bonds.
    • The movement with three double bonds is explained by individual pairs of electrons.
  • A more realistic representation of ben zene can be drawn using this resonance picture.
    • Two carbon atoms bond to one hydrogen atom.
    • All the carbon-carbon bonds are the same length and angle.
  • We will look at how aromatic compounds differ from aliphatic compounds.
    • An aromatic structure confers extra stability and we can predict aromaticity in some interesting and unusual compounds.
  • The Kekule structure and the resonance-delocalized picture show that benzene is a long-term exposure.
    • The reactions of polyenes might be expected of benzene.
    • Cause leukemia is characterized by its reactions that are quite unusual.
    • An alkene reacts to form a glycol and decreases the number of red blood ganate.
    • There is a purple permanganate color and an increase in the number of cells.
    • White blood cells are malfunctioning when permanganate is added.
  • Red and white blood cells are made of H2O.
  • Most alkenes decolorize solutions of bromine in carbon tetrachloride.
  • As bromine adds to the double bond, the red color disappears.
    • There is no reaction when bromine is added to benzene.
  • The H 120deg bond angles are exactly the same as the 1.397 A carbon-carbon bond lengths.
  • The bromine color disappears slowly when ferric bromide is added to the mixture.
  • Benzene's reluctance to undergo typical alkene reactions suggests that it must be stable.
    • We can get a quantitative idea of hydrogenation's stability by comparing its molar heats.
    • All hydrogenate is used to form cyclohexane.
  • It takes 120 kJ>mol to oxidize cyclohexene.
  • The heat of hydrogenation of cyclohexene is twice that of exothermic hydrogenation.
    • The isolated double bonds have zero resonance energy.
  • The value for cyclohexene is twice as high as that for cyclohexa-1,3-diene.
    • A resonance energy of 8 kJ is typical for a diene.
  • Higher pressures of hydrogen and a more active catalyst are required for hydrogenation of benzene.
    • The value for cyclohexene is three times that of this hydrogenation.
  • The resonance energy of benzene can't be explained by the conjugate effects alone.
    • The heat of hydrogenation for benzene is not as hot as it is for cyclohexa-1,3-diene.
    • It is difficult to stop the reaction after 1 mole of H2 because the product hydrogenates more easily than benzene.
    • The benzene ring is notreactive.
  • For a long time, chemists assumed that ben zene's large resonance energy came from two stable resonance structures.
    • They thought that the stability of other hydrocarbons would be similar.
  • There are cyclobutadiene, cyclooctatetraene, and larger annulenes named similarly.
  • Two Kekule-like structures that seem to show a benzene-like reso bonds can be drawn if an annulene is assumed to be have alternating single and double planar.
  • The compounds were supposed to be aromatic.
  • The results imply that the simple resonance picture is not correct.
  • Cyclobutadiene has never been isolated.
    • It undergoes a very fast Diels-Alder dimerization.
    • To avoid the Diels-Alder reaction, cyclobutadiene has been prepared at low concentrations in the gas phase.
  • The evidence shows that cyclooctatetraene is not as stable as benzene.
    • Structural studies have shown that cyclooctatetraene is not a planar substance.
    • Poor overlap between adjacent pi bonds makes it most stable in a "tub" conformation.
  • The carbon and hydrogen atoms are shown in the resonance forms of benzene, cyclobutadiene, and cyclooctatetraene.
  • Two hybrid carbon atoms form continuous rings above and below the plane of the carbon atoms.
  • The stability of the aromatic ring cannot be fully explained by the idea of benzene being a resonance hybrid of two Kekule structures.
    • The key to understanding aromaticity and predicting which compounds will have the stability of an aromatic system is provided by molecular orbital theory.
  • Linear systems such as buta-1,3-diene and the allyl system are Cyclic systems.
    • There is a chance of two distinct MOs having the same energy in a two-dimensional system.
    • We can still follow the same principles in the representation of benzene.
  • There must be six orbitals.
  • The lowest-lying MO in this is benzene.
  • There is a possibility of nonbonding MOs in some cases.
  • From above, you can see the six p molecular orbitals of benzene.
  • At the second energy level, both p2 and p3 have one nodal plane.
    • For a total of two net bonding interactions, p2 has four bonding interactions and two antibonding interactions.
    • p3 has two bonding interactions and four nonbonding interac tions.
    • There are no antibonding interactions in p3 but there is no electron density on the two carbon atoms.
    • Although we can't use the number of bonding and antibonding interactions as a measure of an orbital's energy, it is clear that p2 and p3 are bonding more strongly than p1.
  • Both 4 and p5 have two nodal planes in them.
  • There are two antibonding interactions and four nonbonding interactions in the p*4 orbital.
    • p*5 has four antibonding interactions and two bonding interactions, for a total of two antibonding interactions.
  • p2 and p3 are bonding, but 4 and p5 are not.
  • The p*6 has three nodal planes.
  • The lowest and highest in energy are 1 and p6 respectively.
  • There are three pi bonds in the Kekule structure for benzene.
  • The unusual stability of benzene is explained by this electronic configuration.
    • The first MO is stable and all-bonding.
  • Experiments show that cyclobutadiene is unstable.
    • The all-bonding MO is p1.
  • The p2 and p3 are both symmetrically situated nodal planes.
    • There are two bonding interactions and two antibonding interactions.
    • The net bonding order is zero.
    • p*4 has two nodal planes and is antibonding.
  • The four cyclobutadiene MOs are shown in Figure 16-7.
    • The lowest-lying MO is strongly bonding, and the highest-lying is equally antibonding.
  • All antibonding cyclobutadiene has pi molecular orbitals.
  • The lowest-lying orbital has two electrons filling it.
  • There are different degenerate orbitals with unpaired spins.
  • Its highest-lying electrons are in nonbonding orbitals.
  • The dramatic stability difference between benzene and cyclobutadiene was predicted by the molecular orbital theory.
  • The lowest-lying MO is the only one that doesn't have a nodes, until only one highest-lying MO suggests that the true remains.
    • The energy diagram in benzene looks like a ring.
  • The pattern in cyclobutadiene looks like a diamond.
  • The center of the polygon is given a horizontal direction by the polygon rule.
  • The pi electrons are filled into the orbitals by filling the lowest-energy ones first.
  • Our definition of aromatic compounds includes compounds with double bonds with large resonance energies.
    • We can be more specific about the properties that are required for a compound to be aromatic.
  • The structure must have some number of pi bonds.
  • For effective overlap to occur, the structure must be nearly planar.
  • Open-chain structures are more stable than aromatic structures.
    • benzene is more stable than hexa-1,3,5-triene.
  • Buta-1,3-diene is more stable than cyclobutadiene.
  • It has the same electronic energy as the open-chain counterpart.
  • The CH3 was developed in 1931 to predict which compounds are aromatic and which are antiaromatic.
    • We need to be certain that the compound under consideration meets the criteria for an aromatic or antiaromatic system.
  • The system is aromatic.
  • The rule predicts benzene to be aromatic.
  • The rule predicts cyclobutadiene to be antiaromatic.
  • The classical structure has eight pi electrons and four double bonds.
    • If the rule was applied to cyclooctatetraene, it would show antiaromaticity.
    • It doesn't show the high reactivity associ Huckel's rule, which is commonly used with antiaromaticity.
    • The reactions are typical of alkenes.
  • Its double bonds are unfavorable.
    • It's possible to apply cyclooctatetraene instead of cyclobutadiene.
    • The system assumes a nonplanar "tub" that avoids most of the overlap between nonaromatic and nonplanar.
  • The rule does not apply.
  • Make a model of cyclooctatetraene.
  • They all react as polyenes.
  • The molecule can adopt the necessary planar conformation.
    • An excessive amount of angle strain is required in the all-cis [10]annulene.
    • Two hydrogen atoms interfere with each other, so the isomer with two trans double bonds cannot be a planar one.
    • The partially trans isomer of aromatic compounds can be removed.
  • Predicting planarity is difficult.
  • pi electrons can achieve certain structures.
  • The following two compounds have aromatic properties.
  • The following compounds are classified as aromatic, antiaromatic, or nonaromatic.
  • One of the compounds is more stable than the other two.
  • Benzene is aromatic because it has equal-energy orbitals.
    • The p2 and p3 are filled with electrons.
    • Cyclobutadiene has an open shell of electrons.
    • There are two half-filled orbitals that can accept and donate electrons.
    • Under general conditions, we must show what a filled shell of orbitals is.
  • There is a pattern of orbitals in the system.
    • The lowestlying MO is filled with two electrons.
    • The additional shells have two MOs and space for four electrons.
    • It will have a filled shell.
  • There is a pattern of MOs in the system.
    • The lowest-lying MO is always filled with two electrons.
    • Four electrons are required to fill a shell after two steps.
  • If the system has more than one ring.
    • There is a half-filled shell at the bottom.
  • The energy of one of the MOs is determined by the height of each vertex.
  • Draw a nonbonding line.
  • This is an electronic configuration.
  • The antibonding MOs are difficult to draw and are usually empty in stable to draw.
  • The system has pi electrons.
  • We have talked about aromaticity using the examples of the annulenes.
  • There are even numbers of carbon atoms with alternating single and double bonds.
    • The rule applies to systems with odd numbers of carbon atoms.
    • We now look at aromatic ion and their antiaromatic counterparts.
  • The system would be neutral if there were five pi electrons, but it would be radical because there are not enough pairs.
    • The system is predicted to be antiaromatic with four pi electrons.
    • The rule predicts aromaticity with six pi electrons.
  • The cyclopentadienyl anion is stable because it is aromatic.
    • It can be formed by abstracting a protons from cyclopentadiene.
    • It is nearly as acidic as water and more acidic than alcohol.
  • The non aromatic diene is converted to the aromatic cyclopentadienyl anion by the loss of a protons.
  • When we say that the cyclopentadienyl anion is aromatic, we don't mean that it is stable like benzene.
    • The cyclopentadienyl anion is a carbanion.
    • This ion is more stable than the open-chain ion because it is aromatic.
  • The cyclopentadienyl cation has four pi electrons.
    • The cyclopentadienyl cation is not easy to form.
    • Even in concentrated sulfuric acid, cyclopenta-2,4-dien-1-ol does not lose water.
    • The cation is too unstable.
  • If we use a simple resonance approach, we might not expect the cyclopentadienyl ion to be stable.
  • The resonance less stable more stable approach is not a good predictor of stability.
    • The Huckel's rule is a better predictor of stability for aromatic and antiaromatic systems.
  • There is a misleading suggestion of stability given by the resonance picture.
  • The cyclopropenyl case requires the drawing of the molecular orbitals.
  • Add the nonbonding line to each MO to label them as bonding, nonbonding, or antibonding.
  • It goes through the average of the MOs.
  • Adding electrons to your energy diagram will show the configuration of the cyclopropenyl cation and the cyclopropenyl anion.
  • To confirm the electronic configurations of the cyclopentadienyl cation and anion, fill in the electrons and draw the energy diagram.
  • The anion has eight pi electrons, while the cation has six.
  • We can draw resonance forms that show either the positive charge of the cation or the negative charge of the anion over the seven atoms of the ring.
    • We know that the six-electron system is aromatic and the eight-electron system is antiaromatic.
  • There is a misleading suggestion of stability given by the resonance picture.
  • The cycloheptatrienyl cation can be formed by treating the alcohol with a small amount of sulfuric acid.
    • This is the first example of a stable cation.
  • The tropylium salts can be isolated and stored for a long time.
    • The tropylium ion is not as stable as benzene.
    • It means that the ion is more stable than less stable.
  • The result agrees with the prediction that the cycloheptatrienyl anion is antiaromatic.
  • The cyclopentadienyl anion is stable because of aromatic stabilization.
    • Dianions of hydrocarbons are very difficult to form.
    • An aromatic dianion is formed when cyclooctatetraene reacts with potassium metal.
  • The aromatic cyclooc tatetraene dianion is easy to prepare.
  • Explain why each compound should be aromatic.
  • AgBF4 is used to treat 3-chlorocyclopropene.
    • The organic product can be obtained in a variety of ways.
    • The original 3-chlorocyclopropene is regenerated when the material is dissolved in nitromethane.
    • Determine the structure of the material and write equations for its formation and reaction.
  • The stability of cyclopropenone and cycloheptatrienone is better than anticipated.
    • Cyclopentadienone is unstable and undergoes a Diels-Alder dimerization very quickly.
  • The applications of the rule are summarized in this list.
  • The aromatic 2, 6, and 10 p electron systems are classified according to the number of pi electrons, while the 4 and 8 p electron systems are classified according to the number of pi electrons.
  • The atoms of other elements can also be aromatic.
    • Nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur make up the majority of the aromatic compounds.
  • Pyridine is an aromatic nitrogen analogue.
    • The ring has six pi electrons.
    • H units of benzene and the nonbonding pair of electrons on nitrogen replace benzene's bond to a hydrogen atom.
    • The pi system does not overlap with them.
  • The characteristics of aromatic compounds are shown by Pyridine.
    • It has a reso nance energy of 113 kJ>mol and it usually undergoes substitution rather than addition.
    • pyridine is basic because it has a pair of nonbonding electrons.
  • There are six delocalized electrons in Pyridine.
    • They don't interact with the pi electrons of the ring.
  • N+ H + OH electrons can be used to abstract a particle.
  • The pyridinium ion is still aromatic.
  • Pyrrole has only four pi elec storage of oxygen.
    • The nitrogen atom has a single pair of electrons.
  • The resonance energy of Pyrrole is 92 kJ>mol.
  • Explain how pyrrole works.
  • The pyrrole structure has a charge distribution.
  • The structure of the pyrrole is to blame for the 2CH2COO difference.
  • One of the electron pairs in the aromatic sextet is needed for a N bond to be made.
  • The pyrrole is not aromatic.
  • At the 2-position, CH3 and myoglobin make pyrrole by binding it to one of the carbon atoms of the ring.

  • Pyrrole is a weak base.

The nitrogen atoms are 888-609- 888-609- 888-609- 888-609-

  • The lone pairs are not needed for the aromatic sextet.
  • The lone pair is basic and not involved in the aromatic system.
  • The aromatic sextet is part of the 2 orbital bond to hydrogen.
    • Nitrogen is not very basic.
    • The two nitrogens become equivalent once imidazole is protonsated.
    • Nitrogen can lose a protons and return to an imidazole molecule.
  • There are three basic nitrogen atoms and one pyrrole-like nitrogen in Purine.
  • Pyrimidine and purine derivatives are used to specify the genetic code.
    • Imidazole derivatives increase the activity of enzymes.
    • Chapters 23 and 24 will show us more about these important derivatives.
  • Purine and pyrimidine analogs can be used as anti-cancer drugs.
  • The chemical shifts shown are due to the blocking of the The proton NMR spectrum of 2-pyridone by 5-fluorouracil.
  • Many cancer cells as well as some healthy cells are killed by the key base in DNA.
  • You can use resonance forms to explain your answer.
  • One of the bases in DNA is thymine.
  • The box at the side of the page shows the structure of 5-fluorouracil.
  • Furan is an aromatic five-membered Heterocycle similar to pyrrole, but in furan the to acid rain, because of the release of SO2 from the coal.
    • Heteroatom is the difference between nitrogen and oxygen.
    • The oxygen atom has two lone pairs of electrons, as shown in the classical structure for furan.
  • 67 kJ>mol cleaner-burning product has a resonance energy of Furan.
  • Pyrrole, furan, and thiophene are isoelectronic.
  • The resonance energy of thiophene is 121 kJ>mol.
  • Explain why each compound is aromatic.
  • Pyrrole and furan are examples.
  • B3N3H6 is a stable compound.
    • Explain why borazole is aromatic.
  • The simplest fused aromatic compound is Naphthalene.
    • We use one of the Kekule resonance structures or the circle notation for the aromatic rings to represent naphthalene.
  • There are two aromatic rings in naphthalene.
    • Two iso lated aromatic rings have 6 pi electrons in them.
    • The smaller amount of electron density gives naphthalene less resonance energy than benzene.
  • The compounds become more reactive as the number of rings increases.
    • There is a resonance energy of 347 kJ>mol or 84 kcal>mol per aromatic ring.
    • There is a slightly higher resonance energy of 381 kJ>mol for phenanthrene.
  • Each of these compounds has only 14 pi electrons in its three aromatic rings.
  • Anthracene and phenan threne can undergo addition reactions that are more characteristic of their polyene relatives because they are not as stable as benzene.
    • Anthracene undergoes 1,4-addition at the 9- and 10-positions to give a product with two isolated, fully aromatic benzene rings.
    • phenanthrene is added at the 9- and 10-positions to give a product with two aromatic rings.
  • There are two additions shown.
  • 9-bromophenanthrene results when the product from (c) is heated.
  • There is a mechanism for this.
  • The black material in diesel exhaust has more fused rings than anthracene and phenanthrene, and they have less resonance because of small particles that are rich energy per ring.
    • Most of the large PAHs must be drawn with polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons.
  • Three compounds are present in tobacco smoke.
    • These compounds are so hazardous that laboratories must install special containment facilities to work with them, yet smokers expose their lung tissues to them every time they smoke a cigarette.
  • Its effects appear to be caused by its exposure to arene oxides, which can be attacked by DNA.
    • The resulting derivatives can't be transcribed.
    • They cause errors that cause the genes to change.
  • One of the oldest forms of pure carbon is graphite.
    • The stability of the old and new forms of carbon is dependent on aromaticity.
  • We don't usually think of carbon as an organic compound.
  • "Amorphous carbon" means charcoal, soot, coal, and carbon black.
    • Most of the mate rials are microcrystalline.
    • Small particle sizes and large surface areas are what they are characterized by.
    • The small particles absorb gases and solutes from solution and form strong, stable dispersions in polymers, such as the dispersion of carbon black in tires.
  • The hardest naturally occurring substance is diamond.
    • Diamond has a three-dimensional lattice with carbon atoms linked together.
    • The lattice extends throughout the crystal so that a diamond is one giant molecule.
    • They are unable to carry a current.
  • Diamond is a lattice of carbon atoms.
    • There are layers of aromatic rings.
    • A single layer of Graphene is one atom thick.
  • The distance between layers is 3.35 A, which is twice the van der Waals radius for carbon, suggesting there is little or no bonding between layers.
    • The layers can slide across each other, making it a good lubricant.
    • It is a good electrical conductor parallel to the layers, but it resists electrical currents when they are parallel to the layers.
  • We think of each layer of graphite as a lattice of aromatic rings.
  • There are no bonds between layers and all the valences are satisfied.
    • The layers are held together by only van der Waals forces.
    • The pi electrons within a layer can conduct electrical currents parallel to the layer, but electrons cannot easily jump between layers, so they are resistive to the layers.
  • The conversion of diamond to graphite is very slow for those who have invested in it.
    • The higher density of diamond suggests that it might be con verted to diamond under high pressures.
    • Small industrial diamonds can be made using catalysts such as Cr and Fe, which can be made using pressures over 125,000 atm.
  • The University of Manchester's Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov won the 2010 Nobel Prize in physics for their work on Graphene, which is a single layer of graphite one atom thick.
    • They pulled one layer away from the surface of the piece.
    • Graphene is an excellent conductor.
    • If it can ever be mass-produced in large sheets, it holds great promise for touch-screen monitors.
  • A molecule of formula C60 was isolated from the soot produced by using a laser and an electric arcs.
    • There are only two types of bonds in C60, and it has only one type of carbon atom.
  • A soccer ball has the same structure as C60, with each atom representing a carbon atom.
    • The carbon atoms are the same.
    • Two six-membered rings and one five-membered ring are served by each carbon.
    • There are two types of bonds, the bonds that are shared by a five-membered ring and a six-membered ring, and the bonds shared between two six-membered rings.
    • It appears that the six-membered rings are aromatic, but the double bonds are partially hidden between the six-membered rings.
    • Some of the addition reactions of alkenes can be seen in the double bonds.
  • Half of the C60 sphere is fused to a cylinder made of six- membered rings.
    • The strength-to-weight ratio and the fact that they are only along the length of the tube have aroused interest.
    • Each year, thousands of tons of nanotubes are produced.
    • They are added to the cured polymers to make them stronger.
    • They are used to promote bone growth in tissue cultures and as tips for atomic force microscope probes.
  • A five-membered ring and two six-membered rings are bridgehead carbons.
    • A cylinder made of aromatic six-membered rings is called a nanotube.
  • Half of a C60 sphere is at the end of the tube.
    • The structure to curve at the end of the tube is caused by the five membered buckyball.
  • Purine is a compound with rings that share two atoms and a bond between them.
  • The properties of fused-ring Heterocycles are similar to those of the simple Heterocycles.
    • In nature, fused compounds are used to treat a wide variety of illnesses.
  • A member of the fluoroquinolone class is ciprofloxacin.
  • Benzene derivatives have been used as industrial reagents for over 100 years.
    • Many of their names are from the past.
  • Many compounds are derivatives of benzene, with their substituents being attached to an alkane.
  • The substitution in disubstituted benzenes can be specified with numbers.
  • Numbers are used to indicate the positions of three or more substituents.
  • If the substitution pattern is functional group that defines the base name, a structure to be C1 is assumed.
  • Many disubstituted benzenes have historical names.
  • There is no obvious connection between the structure of the molecule and some of these.

  • Name all the benzenes that have between one and six chlorine atoms.
  • Table 16-1 contains the melting points, boiling points, and densities of benzene and some derivatives.
    • Benzene derivatives have higher melting points than aliphatic compounds because they are more symmetrical.
  • Para disubstituted benzenes pack better into crystals and have higher melting points than the ortho and meta isomers.
  • The boiling points of many benzene derivatives are related to their dipole moments.
  • The lowest boiling point for Dichlorobenzene and the lowest boiling point for the Mothballs is zero.
  • The two compounds are boiling.
    • Dichlorobenzene has the lowest boiling point because it is the highest melting point of the dichlorobenzenes.
  • The benzenes are denser than water.
  • C stretch around 1600 cm-1 is a characteristic of aromatic compounds.
  • The aromatic bond order is only about 1 12 so this is a lower C stretching frequency.
    • The aromatic bond vibrates at a lower Frequency because it is less stiff than a normal double bond.
  • H is stretching just above 3000 cm-1.
    • The compounds labeled Compounds 4, 5, and 7 show aromatic rings.
  • The aromatic ring current protects the 1H NMR signals around d 7 to d 8.
  • The aromatic protons absorb around 7.2 d in benzene.
    • The signals may be moved further downfield bydrawing groups such as carbonyl, nitro, or cyano groups.
  • The aromatics that are ortho or meta split.
  • The spin-spin splitting constants are used for ortho protons and meta protons.
  • Carbon atoms absorb between 120 and 150 in the 13C spectrum.
  • The presence of an aromatic ring is usually confirmed by the combination of 13C NMR with 1H NMR or IR spectroscopy.
  • A resonance-stabilized benzylic cation can be given by the cleavage of a benzylic bond.
    • The aromatic tropylium ion may be given by rearranging the benzyl cation.
  • The ultraviolet spectrum of aromatic compounds is different from that of nonaromatic polyenes.
    • There are three absorptions in the ultraviolet region for benzene: an intense band at lmax of 184 nm, a moderate band at lmax of 204 nm, and a characteristic low-intensity band of multiple absorptions centered around 254 nm.
  • There are three major bands in the benzene spectrum.
  • If benzene were always an unperturbed, perfectly hexagonal structure, the weaker band at 204 nm would correspond to a "forbidden" transition.
  • The molar absorptivities are usually 200 to 300.
  • Most of the characteristics of benzene are shown in simple benzene derivatives, which are in the moderate band and benzenoid band.
    • The values of lmax are increased by about 5 nm by the use of alkyl and halogen substituents.
  • The isomer of this compound is rearranged when it is treated with a strong acid.
    • Suggest a structure for the isomeric product.
  • An organic compound is not aromatic.
  • Different forms of carbon are referred to as allotropic forms.
  • There are alternating single and double bonds.
  • The compound is characterized by a large resonance energy.
  • The benzene ring is a structural unit for aromatic hydrocarbons.
  • The aromatic group that remains after taking a hydrogen atom off an aromatic ring is the generic alkyl group.
  • The band is characterized by multiple sharp absorptions.
  • The arrangement of five-membered and six-membered rings is similar to a dome.
  • Orbitals have the same energy.
  • According to Marilyn Monroe, a girl's best friend.
  • A generic term for carbon clusters similar to C60 and compounds related to them.
  • One or more of the ring atoms in a compound is not carbon.
    • A compound that has a large resonance energy and is aromatic.
  • A classical formula for an aromatic compound.
  • A carbon tube is a cylinder of six-membered rings and half a C60 sphere.
  • There is a relationship on a ring.
  • There is a relationship on a benzene ring.
  • There is a relationship on a benzene ring.
  • The benzene ring is a substituent on another molecule.
  • The energy diagram of the MOs of a regular, completely conjugated system has the same shape as the compound, with one edge at the bottom.
  • There is a polynuclear aromatic Heterocycle.
  • The stabilization provided by delocalization is more than that provided by a local structure.
    • The extra stabilization provided by the delocalization of the electrons in the aromatic ring is called resonance energy.
  • Each skill is followed by problem numbers.
  • If you use the Huckel's rule, you can predict whether a given ion or annulene will be a problem.
  • If nitrogen's lone pairs are used in the aromatic system, you can determine whether the nitrogen atom is weakly basic or strongly basic.
  • The theory of aromatic compounds can be used to explain the properties of fused aromatic systems.
  • Draw their structures from the names.
  • Predict the properties of aromatic compounds and the effects that aromatic rings have on neighboring parts of the molecule.
  • To determine the structures of aromatic compounds, use IR, NMR, UV, and mass spectrums.
  • Problems 16-38, 44, 45, 46, 48 are given an aromatic compound.
  • The structure of each compound can be drawn.

  • Four compounds are shown.
    • One of the compounds reacts more quickly, or with a more favorable equilibrium constant, in each pair.
    • Explain the enhanced reactivity.
  • One of the hydrocarbons is more acidic than the others.
    • Explain why it is acidic.
  • There was no proof that benzene was a six-membered ring in Kekule's time.
  • The structure was determined using the known numbers of monosubstituted and disubstituted benzenes and the knowledge that benzene did not react similarly to a normal alkene.
    • There are six hydrogen atoms in each structure.
  • Draw all the possible monobrominated derivatives that could result from a random substitution of one hydrogen with a bromine.
    • Benzene had only one monobromo derivative.
  • Draw all the possible dibromo derivatives for the structures that only had one monobromo derivative.
    • At the time resonance theory was unknown, Benzene was known to have three dibromo derivatives.
  • Determine which structure was most consistent with what was known about benzene at that time: Benzene gives one monobrominated derivative and three dibrominated derivatives, and it gives negative chemical tests for alkene.
  • The ion and molecule are grouped by similar structures.
    • Give the number of pi electrons in the ring to the aromatic species.
  • Nitrogen atoms are included in each of the following Heterocycles.
    • Classify the nitrogen atom according to the availability of its lone pair of electrons.
  • Some of the compounds have aromatic properties, but others do not.
  • Explain why they are aromatic.
  • Predict which nitrogen atoms are more basic than water.
  • Simple alkyl intermediates are more stable than benzylic cations, anions, and radicals.
  • Use resonance forms to show the delocalization of the positive charge, unpaired electron, and negative charge of the benzyl cation, radical, and anion.
  • In the presence of light, toluene reacts with bromine to give benzyl bromide.
    • There is a mechanism for this reaction.
  • You can use a drawing of the transition state to explain your answer.
  • Adding a third group and figuring out how many isomers are formed is one of the methods used by Korner.
    • Two isomers are formed when xylene is nitrated.
  • A chemist isolated an aromatic compound from a formula.
    • He nitrated this compound and made three isomers.
  • The structure should be consistent with the spectrum and the additional information provided.
  • The formula shown in the analysis is C8H7OCl.
    • There is a moderate absorption at 1602 cm-1 and a strong absorption at 1690 cm-1 in the IR spectrum.
  • The Diels-Alder reaction requires a Kekule structure that shows how the reactive positions of anthracene are at the end of a diene.
  • A common organic lab experiment is the Diels-Alder reaction of anthracene with maleic anhydride.
  • Biphenyl has a structure.
  • dianions of hydrocarbons are very rare.
    • A dianion of formula [C9H9]2 is formed by the reaction of the following hydrocarbons with two equivalents of butyllithium.
    • Give a structure for this dianion and explain why it forms so quickly.
  • The structure of a ribonucleoside is shown here.
  • The four bases are uracil, guanine, and adenine.
  • Determine which bases are aromatic.

Which nitrogen atoms are basic?

  • A student found an old bottle in the stockroom.
    • She obtained the following mass after smelling a pleasant odor.
    • On shaking with D2O, the peak of the NMR disappears.
    • Show how your structure is consistent with the spectrum.
    • The resulting ion is stable.
  • It has been separated into enantiomers.
    • The optical rotation is enormous.
  • Explain why the rotation is large and speculate as to why it is so active.
  • To see the relative energies of all the MO's, draw the energy diagram and show which orbitals the electrons would occupy in the ground state.
    • Predict whether the ion is aromatic or not.
  • The hydrogens in pyridine are shown.
    • The ortho protons are deshielded to d 8.60, which is a typical aromatic chemical shift.
  • A family of compounds called chlorophyll is present in green plants.
    • The energy in the sun can be used to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugars.
    • The chlorin is a large-ring magnesium complex.
    • The large pi system makes it aromatic.
  • Many properties, including aromaticity, have been probed with the use of NMR.