11.1 Organic Compounds

11.1 Organic Compounds

  • Try Practice Problems 11 to 11.6 carbon atom in ethane have the same shape as methane.

  • Draw the line-angle and structural formulas for alkanes from the IUPAC names.
  • Most of the compounds in the world are organic.
    • The strength of C allows carbon atoms to form long, stable chains.
  • Fuels are one of the most common uses of alkanes.
    • Methane is an alkane with one carbon atom.

  • Each carbon atom and its hydrogen atoms are written as a group in a formula.
    • The number of hydrogen atoms is indicated by a subscript.
  • The carbon atoms don't lie in a straight line when an organic molecule consists of a chain of three or more carbon atoms.
    • They are arranged in a pattern.
  • There are three hydrogen atoms on the ends of the carbon atoms.
    • There are two carbons and two hydrogen atoms in the middle of the carbon chain.
  • The expanded, Condensed structural, and line-angle formulas are used for pentane.
  • Draw the chain.
    • There are five carbon atoms in a continuous chain.
  • The expanded structural formula can be drawn by adding hydrogen atoms with single bonds to carbon atoms.
  • Combine the H atoms with the C atoms to make a structural formula.
  • The zigzag line in the line-angle formula represents the ends and corners of C atoms.
  • The groups attached to each C are not in fixed positions because an alkane has only single carbon-carbon bonds.
    • The bonds connecting the carbon atoms can be freely rotating.
    • A variety of structural formulas can be used to represent the same compound with four carbon atoms.
  • The simplest cycloalkane has a ring of three carbon atoms and six hydrogen atoms.
  • Most cycloalkanes are drawn using their line-angle formulas, which look like simple geometric figures.
    • The carbon atom is represented by each corner of the line-angle formula for a cycloalkane.
  • A chain has eight carbon atoms.
  • The cyclohexane is a ring of six carbon atoms.