Organic Chemistry II For Dummies®
Table of Contents
Introduction
About This Book
Conventions Used in This Book
What You’re Not to Read
Foolish Assumptions
How This Book Is Organized
Part I: Brushing Up on Important Organic Chemistry I Concepts
Part II: Discovering Aromatic (And Not So Aromatic) Compounds
Part III: Carbonyls: Good Alcohols Gone Bad
Part IV: Advanced Topics (Every Student’s Nightmare)
Part V: Pulling It All Together
Part VI: The Part of Tens
Icons Used in This Book
Where to Go from Here
Part I: Brushing Up on Important Organic Chemistry I Concepts
Chapter 1: Organic Chemistry II: Here We Go Again!
Recapping Organic Chemistry I
Intermolecular forces
Functional groups
Reactions
Spectroscopy
Isomerism and optical activity
Looking Ahead to Organic Chemistry II
Chapter 2: Remembering How We Do It: Mechanisms
Duck — Here Come the Arrows
Coming Around to Curved Arrows
Getting Ready for Some Basic Moves
Bond → lone pair
Bond → bond
Lone pair → bond
Combining the Basic Moves
Intermediates
Keys to substitution and elimination mechanisms
Revisiting Free-Radical Mechanisms
Part II: Discovering Aromatic (And Not So Aromatic) Compounds
Chapter 3: Alcohols and Ethers: Not Just for Drinking and Sleeping
Getting Acquainted with Alcohols
Structure and nomenclature of alcohols
Physical properties of alcohols
Making moonshine: Synthesis of alcohols
What will they do besides burn? Reactions of alcohols
Introducing Ether (Not the Ether Bunny)
Structure and nomenclature of ethers
Sleepy time: Physical properties of ethers
Synthesis of ethers
Reactions of ethers
Summarizing the Spectra of Alcohols and Ethers
Chapter 4: Conjugated Unsaturated Systems
When You Don’t Have Enough: Unsaturated Systems
Conjugated systems
The allylic radical
Butadiene
Delocalization and Resonance
Resonance rules
Stability of conjugated unsaturated systems
Reactions of Conjugated Unsaturated Systems
Put in the second string: Substitution reactions
Electrophilic addition
More than a tree: Diels-Alder reactions
Passing an Exam with Diels-Adler Questions
Indentifying the product
Identifying the reactants
Chapter 5: "Seeing" Molecules: Spectroscopy Revisited
Chemical Fingerprints: Infrared Spectroscopy
Double bonds
Triple bonds
O-H and N-H stretches
C-H stretches
Suntans and Beyond: Ultraviolet and Visible Spectroscopy
Not Weight Watchers, Mass Watchers: Mass Spectroscopy
The molecular ion
Fragmentation
No Glowing Here: NMR Spectroscopy
Proton
Carbon-13
Chapter 6: Introducing Aromatics
Benzene: Where It All Starts
Figuring out benzene’s structure
Understanding benzene’s resonance
The stability of benzene
Physical properties of benzene
Organic math — Hückel’s Rule
Other aromatics
Smelly Relatives: The Aromatic Family
Nomenclature of the aromatic family
Derivatives of benzene
Branches of aromatic groups
Black Sheep of the Family: Heterocyclic Aromatic Compounds
Aromatic nitrogen compounds
Aromatic oxygen and sulfur compounds
Spectroscopy of Aromatic Compounds
IR
UV-vis
NMR
Mass spec
Chapter 7: Aromatic Substitution Part I: Attack of the Electrophiles
Basics of Electrophilic Substitution Reactions
Reactions of Benzene
Halogenation of benzene
Nitration of benzene
Sulfonation of benzene
Friedel-Crafts Reactions
Alkylation
Acylation
Why Do an Alkylation?
Changing Things: Modifying the Reactivity of an Aromatic
Lights, camera, action: Directing
Turning it on, turning it off: Activating and deactivating
Steric hindrance
Limitations of Electrophilic Substitution Reactions
Chapter 8: Aromatic Substitution Part II: Attack of the Nucleophiles and Other Reactions
Coming Back to Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions
Mastering the Mechanisms of Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions
Losing and Gaining: Mechanisms of Elimination/Addition Reactions
Benzyne
The elimination/addition mechanism
Synthetic Strategies for Making Aromatic Compounds
Briefly Exploring Other Reactions
Part III: Carbonyls: Good Alcohols Gone Bad
Chapter 9: Comprehending Carbonyls
Carbonyl Basics
Considering compounds containing the carbonyl group
Getting to know the acidic carbonyl
Polarity of Carbonyls
Resonance in Carbonyls
Reactivity of the Carbonyl Group
Spectroscopy of Carbonyls
Infrared spectroscopy
Ultraviolet-visible (electronic) spectroscopy
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
Mass spectroscopy
Chapter 10: Aldehydes and Ketones
Meeting Alcohol’s Relatives: Structure and Nomenclature
Defining Physical Properties of Aldehydes and Ketones
Creating Aldehydes and Ketones with Synthesis Reactions
Oxidation reactions
Reduction reactions
Other reactions
Taking Them a Step Further: Reactions of Aldehydes and Ketones
Nucleophilic attack of aldehydes and ketones
Oxidation of aldehydes and ketones
The Baeyer-Villiger reaction
Checking Out Spectroscopy Specs
Chapter 11: Enols and Enolates
Getting to Know Enols and Enolates
Enough already: Structure of enols and enolates
I thought I saw a tautomer
Studying the Synthesis of Enols and Enolates
Thinking Through Reactions of Enols and Enolates
Haloform reactions
Aldol reactions and condensations
Addition reactions to unsaturated aldehydes and ketones
Other enolate-related reactions
Miscellaneous reactions
Chapter 12: Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives
Seeing the Structure and Nomenclature of Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives
Structure
Nomenclature
Checking Out Some Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives
Carboxylic acids
Esters
Amides
Considering the Acidity of Carboxylic Acids
Determining How Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives Are Synthesized
Synthesizing carboxylic acids
Developing acyl halides with halogen
Removing water to form acid anhydrides
Uniting acids and alcohols to make esters
Bringing acids and bases together to create amides
Exploring Reactions
Generous carboxylic acids
Simple acyl halide and anhydride reactions
Hydrolysis of esters
Amide reactions, ester’s cousins
Other reactions of carboxylic acids and derivatives
Taking a Look at Spectroscopy and Chemical Tests
Identifying compounds with spectral data
Using chemical tests
Part IV: Advanced Topics (Every Student’s Nightmare)
Chapter 13: Amines and Friends
Breaking Down the Structure and Nomenclature of Nitrogen Compounds
Primary amines
Secondary and tertiary amines
Quaternary amines (quaternary ammonium salts)
Heterocyclics
Sizing Up the Physical Properties
Understanding the Basicity of Nitrogen Compounds
Synthesizing Nitrogen Compounds
Nucleophilic substitution reactions
Reduction preparations
Seeing How Nitrogen Compounds React
Reactions with nitrous acid
Replacement reactions
Coupling reactions of diazonium salts
Reactions with sulfonyl chlorides
Exploring elimination reactions
Mastering Multistep Synthesis
Identifying Nitrogen Compounds with Analysis and Spectroscopy
Chapter 14: Metals Muscling In: Organometallics
Grignard Reagents: Grin and Bear It
Preparation of Grignard reagents
Reactions of Grignard reagents
Organolithium Reagents
Formation of Other Organometallics
Putting It Together
Chapter 15: More Reactions of Carbonyl Compounds
Checking Out the Claisen Condensation and Its Variations
Doing the two-step: Claisen condensation
Circling around: Dieckmann condensation
Doubling Up: Crossed Claisen condensation
Other carbanions
Exploring Acetoacetic Ester Synthesis
Defining Malonic Ester Synthesis
Working with Other Active Hydrogen Atoms
Reacting with Knoevenagel Condensation
Looking at Mannich Reactions
Creating Enamines: Stork Enamine Synthesis
Putting It All Together with Barbiturates
Chapter 16: Living Large: Biomolecules
Delving into Carbohydrate Complexities
Introducing carbohydrates
Examining the many reactions of monosaccharides
Synthesizing and degrading monosaccharides
Meeting the (D-)aldose family
Checking out a few disaccharides
Looking at some polysaccharides
Discovering nitrogen-containing sugars
Lipids: Storing Energy Now So You Can Study Longer Later
Pondering the properties of fats
Soaping up with saponification
Bulking Up on Amino Acids and Proteins
Introducing amino acids
Perusing the physical properties of amino acids
Studying the synthesis of amino acids
Part V: Pulling It All Together
Chapter 17: Overview of Synthesis Strategies
Working with One-Step Synthesis
Tackling Multistep Synthesis
Practicing Retrosynthetic and Synthetic Analysis
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
Example 5
Chapter 18: Roadmaps and Predicting Products
Preparing with Roadmap Basics
Practicing Roadmap Problems
Problem one
Solution one
Problem two
Solution two
Problem three
Solution three
Predicting Products
Part VI: The Part of Tens
Chapter 19: Ten Surefire Ways to Fail Organic Chemistry II
Simply Read and Memorize Concepts
Don’t Bother Working the Homework Problems and Exercises
Don’t Buy a Model Kit
Don’t Worry About Falling Behind
Don’t Bother Learning Reactions
If Your Textbook Confuses You, Don’t Bother with Additional Resources
Don’t Bother Reading the Chapter before Attending Class
Attend Class Only When You Feel Like It
Don’t Bother Taking Notes — Just Listen (When You Aren’t Sleeping or Texting)
Don’t Bother Asking Questions
Chapter 20: More than Ten Ways to Increase Your Score on an Organic Chemistry Exam
Don’t Cram the Night before a Test
Try Doing the Problem Sets and Practice Tests Twice
Study the Mistakes You Made on Previous Exams
Know Precisely Where, Why, and How the Electrons Are Moving
Relax and Get Enough Sleep before the Exam
Think Before You Write
Include Formal Charges in Your Structures When Appropriate
Check That You Haven’t Lost Any Carbon Atoms
Include E/Z, R/S, cis/trans Prefixes in Naming Organic Structures
Think of Spectroscopy, Especially NMR, As a Puzzle
Make Sure That Each Carbon Atom Has Four Bonds
Appendix: Named Reactions
Organic Chemistry II For Dummies®
by John T. Moore, EdD, and Richard H. Langley, PhD
Organic Chemistry II For Dummies®
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About the Authors
John T. Moore, EdD, grew up in the foothills of western North Carolina. He attended the University of North Carolina–Asheville where he received his bachelor’s degree in chemistry. He earned his master’s degree in chemistry from Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina. After a stint in the United States Army, he decided to try his hand at teaching. In 1971 he joined the chemistry faculty of Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas, where he still teaches chemistry. In 1985 he went back to school part time and in 1991 received his doctorate in education from Texas A&M University. For the past several years he has been the co-editor (along with one of his former students) of the “Chemistry for Kids” feature of The Journal of Chemical Education. In 2003 his first book, Chemistry For Dummies, was published by Wiley, soon to be followed by Chemistry Made Simple (Broadway) and Chemistry Essentials For Dummies (Wiley). John enjoys cooking and making custom knife handles from exotic woods.
Richard H. Langley, PhD, grew up in southwestern Ohio. He attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, where he received bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and in mineralogy and a master’s degree in chemistry. His next stop was the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he received his doctorate in chemistry. Afterwards he took a postdoctoral position at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona, followed by a visiting assistant professor position at the University of Wisconsin–River Falls. In 1982 he moved to Stephen F. Austin State University. For the past several years he and John have been graders for the free-response portion of the AP Chemistry Exam. He and John have collaborated on several writing projects, including 5 Steps to a Five AP Chemistry and Chemistry for the Utterly Confused (both published by McGraw-Hill). Rich enjoys jewelry making and science fiction.
Dedication
John: I dedicate this book to my wife, Robin; sons, Matthew and Jason; my wonderful daughter-in-law, Sara; and the two most wonderful grandkids in the world, Zane and Sadie. I love you guys.
Rich: I dedicate this book to my mother.
Authors’ Acknowledgments
We would not have had the opportunity to write this book without the encouragement of our agent Grace Freedson. We would also like to thank Chrissy Guthrie for her support and assistance in the early portion of this project and to Sarah Faulkner who helped us complete it. We would also like to thank our copy editor, Caitie Copple, and our technical editors, Susan Klein and Joe Burnell.
Many thanks to our colleagues Russell Franks and Jim Garrett who helped with suggestions and ideas. Rich would also like to acknowledge Danica Dizon for her suggestions, ideas, and inspiration. Thanks to all of the people at Wiley publishing who help bring this project from concept to publication.
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Introduction
Welcome to Organic Chemistry II For Dummies. We’re certainly happy you decided to delve further into the fascinating world of organic chemistry. It’s a complex area of chemistry, but understanding organic chemistry isn’t really that difficult. It simply takes hard work, attention to detail, some imagination, and the desire to know. Organic chemistry, like any area of chemistry, is not a spectator sport. You need to interact with the material, try different study techniques, and ask yourself why things happen the way they do.
Organic Chemistry II is a more intricate course than the typical freshman introductory chemistry course, and you may find that it’s also more involved than Organic I. You may actually need to use those things you learned (and study habits you developed) in Organic I to be successful in Organic II. But if you work hard, you can get through your Organic II course. More importantly, you may grow to appreciate the myriad chemical reactions that take place in the diverse world of organic chemistry.
About This Book
Organic Chemistry II For Dummies is an overview of the material covered in the second half of a typical college-level organic chemistry course. We have made every attempt to keep the material as current as possible, but the field of chemistry is changing ever so quickly as new reactions are developed and the fields of biochemistry and biotechnology inspire new avenues of research. The basics, however, stay the same, and they are where we concentrate our attention.
As you flip through this book, you see a lot of chemical structures and reactions. Much of organic chemistry involves knowing the structures of the molecules involved in organic reactions. If you’re in an Organic Chemistry II course, you made it through the first semester of organic chemistry, so you recognize many of the structures, or at least the functional groups, from your previous semester’s study.
If you bought this book just to gain general knowledge about a fascinating subject, try not to get bogged down in the details. Skim the chapters. If you find a topic that interests you, stop and dive in. Have fun learning something new.
If you’re taking an organic chemistry course, you can use this rather inexpensive book to supplement that very expensive organic textbook.
Conventions Used in This Book
We have organized this book in a logical progression of topics; your second semester organic chemistry course may progress similarly. In addition, we set up the following conventions to make navigating this book easier:
Italics introduce new terms that you need to know.
Bold text highlights keywords within a bulleted list.
We make extensive use of illustrations of structures and reactions. While reading, try to follow along in the associated figures, whether they be structures or reactions.
What You’re Not to Read
You don’t have a whole lot of money invested in this book, so don’t feel obliged to read what you don’t need. Concentrate on the topic(s) in which you need help. Feel free to skip over any text in a gray shaded box (which we refer to as sidebars). Although interesting, they aren’t required reading.
Foolish Assumptions
We assume — and we all know about the perils of assumptions — that you are one of the following:
A student taking a college-level organic chemistry course.
A student reviewing organic chemistry for some type of standardized exam (the MCAT, for example).
An individual who just wants to know something about organic chemistry.
If you fall into a different category, you’re special and we hope you enjoy this book anyway.
How This Book Is Organized
The topics in this book are divided into six parts. Use the following descriptions and the table of contents to map out your strategy of study.
Part I: Brushing Up on Important Organic Chemistry I Concepts
Part I is really a rapid review of many of the concepts found in an Organic Chemistry I course. It’s designed to review the topics that you need in Organic II. We set the stage by giving you an overview of Organic Chemistry II, and then review mechanisms. Next we cover alcohols and ethers, their properties, synthesis, and reactions; followed by an overview of conjugated unsaturated systems. We end this review section with a discussion of spectroscopy, including IR, UV-visible, mass spec, and, of course, NMR. A whirlwind tour of Organic I!
Part II: Discovering Aromatic (And Not So Aromatic) Compounds
In Part II we concentrate on aromatic systems, starting with the basics of structure and properties of benzene and then moving on to related aromatic compounds. We even throw in a section of spectroscopy of aromatic compounds. Chapters 7 and 8 finish up this part by going into detail about substitution reactions of aromatic compounds. You find out all you ever wanted to know (and maybe more) about electrophilic and nucleophilic substitutions, along with a little about elimination reactions.
Part III: Carbonyls: Good Alcohols Gone Bad
In Part III we cover that broad category of organic compounds called the carbonyls. First we give you an overview of carbonyl basics, including structure, reactivity, and spectroscopy. Then we go into more detail on aldehydes and ketones, enols and enolates, and carboxylic acids and their derivatives.
Part IV: Advanced Topics (Every Student’s Nightmare)
In Part IV we start by taking a closer look at nitrogen compounds and their structure, reactivity, and reactions. Then we move on to organometallic compounds, where we meet the infamous Grignard reaction. We then finish up this part by addressing some more-involved reactions of the carbonyls and biomolecules. You pick up some good hints for synthesis and roadmaps here.
Part V: Pulling It All Together
In Part V we show you how to pull all the previous information together and use it to develop strategies for designing synthesis reactions. We talk about both one-step and multistep synthesis as well as retrosynthetic analysis. Then we tackle the dreaded organic roadmaps. (We all wish we had an organic chemistry GPS here.)
Part VI: The Part of Tens
In this final part of the book we discuss ten surefire ways to flunk your organic chemistry class (so you know what to avoid) along with ten ways to increase your grade on those organic chemistry exams.
Icons Used in This Book
If you have ever read other For Dummies books (such as the wonderful Chemistry For Dummies or Biochemistry For Dummies, written by yours truly and published by Wiley), you recognize the icons used in this book. The following four icons can guide you to certain kinds of information:
This icon is a flag for those really important things that you shouldn’t forget as you go deeper into the world of organic chemistry.
We use this icon to alert you to a tip on the easiest or quickest way to learn a concept. Between the two of us, we have almost 70 years of teaching experience. We’ve learned a few tricks along the way and we don’t mind sharing.
The warning icon points to a procedure or potential outcome that can be dangerous. We call it our Don’t-Try-This-At-Home icon.
We try to avoid getting too technical throughout this book (believe it or not), but every now and then we can’t help but throw something in that is a little more in-depth than you might need. You won’t hurt your education by skipping it.
Where to Go from Here
The answer to this question really depends of your prior knowledge and goals. As with all For Dummies books, this one attempts to make all the chapters independent so that you can dive right into the material that’s causing you trouble without having to read other chapters first. If you feel comfortable with the topics covered in Organic Chemistry I, feel free to skip Part I. If you want a general overview of organic chemistry, skim the remainder of the book. Take a deeper plunge into a chapter when you find a topic that interests you or one in which you really need help.
And for all of you, no matter who you are or why you’re reading this book, we hope you have fun reading it and that it helps you to understand and appreciate organic chemistry.
Part I
Brushing Up on Important Organic Chemistry I Concepts
In this part . . .
Part I is a review of some general chemistry and Organic Chemistry I topics you need a firm grounding in before moving on to Organic Chemistry II. Different books and different instructors break Organic I and Organic II material at different places. We use the most common break, but some Part I material may, in fact, be new to you. Even if you covered these concepts last semester, some of them have a high vapor pressure and may have escaped between semesters.
We begin by bringing you up to speed on mechanisms and reminding you how to push electrons around with those curved arrows. We jog your memory with a discussion of substitution and elimination reactions and their mechanisms, in addition to free radical reactions. Next you review the structure, nomenclature, synthesis, and reactions of alcohols and ethers, and then you get to tackle conjugated unsaturated systems. Finally, we remind you of spectroscopic techniques, from the IR fingerprints to NMR shifts. The review in this part moves at a pretty fast pace, but we’re sure you can keep up.
Chapter 1
Organic Chemistry II: Here We Go Again!
In This Chapter
Reviewing the material you learned in Organic I
Previewing what you find out in Organic II
If you’re looking at this chapter, it’s probably because you’re getting ready to take the second half of organic chemistry, are in the midst of Organic II, or you’re trying to figure out what Organic II covers in time to change your major from pre-med to art history. In any respect, you probably successfully completed Organic Chemistry I. Many of the study techniques (and coping mechanisms) you learned that helped you do well in Organic I are helpful in Organic II. The two primary things to remember are
Never get behind.
Carbon has four bonds.
In this book we use larger, more complex molecules than you may have encountered in Organic I. We chose to do this because, firstly, that’s the nature of Organic II — larger and more complex molecules. Secondly, many of you will be taking biochemistry at some point, and to succeed in that subject you need to become comfortable with large, involved molecules. (If you do take biochemistry, be sure to check out Biochemistry For Dummies by John T. Moore and Richard H. Langley [Wiley]. We understand the authors are really great guys.)
To get you started, this chapter does a quick review of the topics commonly found in Organic I, and then gives an overview of what we cover in Organic II.
Recapping Organic Chemistry I
In Organic I you learned that organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds. Until the mid-1800s, people believed that all carbon compounds were the result of biological processes requiring a living organism. This was called the vital force theory. The synthesis (or formation) of urea from inorganic materials showed that other paths to the production of carbon compounds are possible. Many millions of organic compounds exist because carbon atoms form stable bonds to other carbon atoms. The process of one type of atom bonding to identical atoms is catenation. Many elements can catenate, but carbon is the most effective, with apparently no limit to how many carbon atoms can link together. These linkages may be in chains, branched chains, or rings, providing a vast combination of compounds.
Carbon is also capable of forming stable bonds to a number of other elements, including the biochemically important elements hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur. The latter three elements form the foundation of many of the functional groups you studied in Organic I.
Intermolecular forces
You also learned about intermolecular forces in Organic I. Intermolecular forces (forces between chemical species) are extremely important in explaining the interaction between molecules. Intermolecular forces that you saw in Organic I and see again in Organic II include dipole-dipole interactions, London, hydrogen bonding, and sometimes ionic interactions.
Dipole-dipole forces exist between polar regions of different molecules. The presence of a dipole means that the molecule has a partially positive (δ+) end and a partially negative (δ–) end. Opposite partial charges attract each other, whereas like partial charges repel.
Hydrogen bonding, as the name implies, involves hydrogen. This hydrogen atom must be bonded to either an oxygen atom or a nitrogen atom. (In nonbiological situations, hydrogen bonding also occurs when a hydrogen atom bonds to a fluorine atom.) Hydrogen bonding is significantly stronger than a normal dipole-dipole force, and is stronger than London dispersion forces, the forces between nonpolar molecules due to the fluctuations of the electron clouds of atoms or molecules. The hydrogen bonded to either a nitrogen or oxygen atom is strongly attracted to a different nitrogen or oxygen atom. Hydrogen bonding may be either intramolecular or intermolecular.
In organic reactions, ionic interactions may serve as intermolecular or intramolecular forces. In some cases, these may involve metal cations, such as Na+, or anions, such as Cl–. Cations may include an ammonium ion from an amino group, such as RNH3+. The anion may be from a carboxylic acid, such as RCOO–. The oppositely charged ions attract each other very strongly.
Functional groups
Carbon is an extremely versatile element because it can form many different compounds. Most of the compounds have one or more functional groups, which contain atoms other than carbon and hydrogen and/or double or triple bonds, and define the reactivity of the organic molecule.
In Organic I you probably started with the hydrocarbons, compounds of carbon and hydrogen, including the alkenes and alkynes that contained double and single bonds, respectively. Then you probably touched on some of the more common functional groups, such as alcohols and maybe even some aromatic compounds.
Reactions
You encountered a lot of reactions in Organic I. Every time you encountered a different functional group, you had a slew of reactions to learn. Reactions that told how the functional group could be formed, common reactions that the functional group underwent — reactions, reactions, and more reactions.
Two of the most important ones you learned were substitution and elimination reactions: SN1, SN2, E1, and E2. We hope you learned them well, because you’ll be seeing them again quite often.
Spectroscopy
In Organic I you probably learned a lot about the different types of spectroscopy and how they’re used in structure determinations. You discovered how mass spectroscopy can give you an idea about molar mass and what fragments may be present in the molecule. You found out that infrared spectroscopy can be used to identify functional groups, and you learned to look at the fingerprint region. Then finally you progressed to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, one of the main tools of organic chemists, which can be used to interpret chemical shifts and splitting patterns to give you more clues about structure.
Isomerism and optical activity
During Organic I you were exposed to the concepts associated with isomerism and optical activity. You need to be familiar with these concepts in Organic II, so we take a few minutes here for a brief review.
Isomers are compounds with the same molecular formula but different structural formulas. Some organic and biochemical compounds may exist in different isomeric forms, and these different isomers have different properties. The two most common types of isomers in organic systems are cis-trans isomers and isomerism due to the presence of a chiral carbon.
Cis-trans isomers
The presence of carbon-carbon double bonds leads to the possibility of isomers. Double bonds are rather restrictive and limit molecular movement. Groups on the same side of the double bond tend to remain in that position (cis), while groups on opposite sides tend to remain across the bond from each other (trans). You can see an example of each in Figure 1-1. However, if the two groups attached to either of the carbon atoms of the double bond are the same, cis-trans isomers are not possible. Cis isomers are the normal form of fatty acids, but processing tends to convert some of the cis isomers to the trans isomers.
Figure 1-1: Cis and trans isomers.

Cis-trans isomers are also possible in cyclic systems. The cis form has similar groups on the same side of the ring, while the trans form has similar groups above and below the ring.
Chiral compounds
A carbon atom with four different groups attached is chiral. A chiral carbon rotates plane-polarized light, light whose waves are all in the same plane, and has an enantiomer (non-superimposable mirror image). Rotation, which may be either to the right (dextrorotatory) or to the left (levorotatory), leads to one optical isomer being d and the other being l. Specific rotation (represented
by
, where α = observed rotation, T = temperature, and D = sodium D line)
is a measure of the ability of a compound to rotate light. The specific rotation comes from the observed rotation (α) divided by the product of the concentration of the solution and the length of the container. Other than optical activity, the physical properties of enantiomers are the same.
A racemic mixture is a 50:50 mixture of the enantiomers.
A meso compound is a compound with chiral centers and a plane of symmetry. The plane of symmetry leads to the optical rotation of one chiral carbon cancelling the optical rotation of another.
Diastereomers are stereoisomers that aren’t enantiomers.
R-S notation is a means of designating the geometry around the chiral center. This method requires the groups attached to the chiral center to be prioritized in order of decreasing atomic weight. To assign the center, place the lowest priority group (the group with the lowest atomic weight) on the far side and count the remaining groups as 1, 2, and 3. Counting to the right is R and counting to the left is S. Any similarity between d and l and R and S is coincidental.
Some important organic compounds have more than one chiral center. Multiple chiral centers indicate the presence of multiple stereoisomers. The maximum number of stereoisomers is 2n where n is the number of nonidentical chiral centers. Figure 1-2 shows the four stereoisomers present in a molecule with two chiral centers. Non-superimposable mirror images are enantiomers, while the other species in the figure are diastereomers. Unlike enantiomers, diastereomers have different physical properties.
Figure 1-2: Representa-tions of a molecule with two chiral centers.

Emil Fischer developed a method of drawing a compound to illustrate which stereoisomer is present. Drawings of this type, called Fischer projection formulas, are very useful in biochemistry. In a projection formula, a chiral carbon is placed in the center of a + pattern. The vertical lines (bonds) point away from the viewer, and the horizontal lines point towards the viewer. Fischer used the D designation if the most important group was to the right of the carbon, and the L designation if the most important group was to the left of the carbon. (See Figure 1-3.)
Figure 1-3: The Fischer projection formulas.

The use of D and L is gradually being replaced by the R and S system of designating isomers, which is particularly useful when more than one chiral carbon atom is present.
Looking Ahead to Organic Chemistry II
One of the keys to Organic II is mechanisms, the specific way in which a reaction proceeds. Recall from Organic I that this involves pushing around electrons, showing where they’re going with curved arrows. We give you a good review of these concepts in Chapter 2, along with some basic reaction moves.
In Chapter 3 we go into some depth about alcohols and ethers. Like Organic I, when we encounter a new functional group we examine the structure, nomenclature, properties, synthesis, and reactions. In some courses and textbooks, alcohols are covered in the first semester, but for those readers who haven’t gotten to them yet, we include them in this book. If you’re already comfortable with that material, please feel free to skip that chapter and go on to another.
Chemistry For Dummies Chemistry Essentials For Dummies,
Carbon compounds that also contain nitrogen, such as the amines, play a significant part of any Organic II course. You encounter more acid-base chemistry with the amines, along with some more reactions. We hit this topic in Chapter 13 and give you some tips for multistep synthesis.
You probably haven’t considered the fact that some organic compounds may contain a metal, so we give you an opportunity to become familiar with the organometallics in Chapter 14. In this chapter you meet the Grignard reaction. It’s a very important organic reaction that you may have the opportunity to run in organic lab.
You just can’t get away from those carbonyls, so you get another taste of these reactions, many of them named reactions, in Chapter 15. You may be able to avoid biomolecules if your course doesn’t cover them, but if it does, Chapter 16 is there for you.
Finally, what’s a good organic course without multistep and retrosynthesis along with roadmaps? We hope that our tips can ease your pain at this point. Roadmaps are the bane of most organic chemistry students, but just hang in there. There is life after organic chemistry, and you may just find in the end that you actually enjoyed organic. And for those of you who missed the chemical calculations, there’s always quantitative analysis and physical chemistry.