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MCAT O Chem (VL)

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Question
Answer
Degree of unsaturation   [(2N+2)-X]/2 N --> carbons H --> H or monovalent atoms (F, Br) N --> counts as 1C and 1H If = 0, then saturated  
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Bond dissociation energy   Energy required for homolytic break (creating radicals), as opposed to heterolytic break (creating ions)  
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Bond dissociation energy relationship with length and hybridization   More s character = Short length = higher bond dissociation energy  
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Constitutional isomers   Same molecular formula but different connectivity  
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Conformational isomers   Same molecular formula and connectivity but different rotation about a single sigma bond. They are the exact same molecule. Staggered vs eclipse conformation.  
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Staggered vs eclipse conformation   Conformational isomers. Staggered don't overlap, eclipsed does.  
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Newman projection   Big circle is back carbon  
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Gauche vs anti conformation   Gauche gives you relative minimum (staggered but large groups are near by). Anti gives you absolute minimum. Staggered and large groups are at opposite sides.  
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When could the gauche conformation be more stable than anti   When it allows hydrogen bonding between the large groups (provided the groups are not too large)  
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Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules   Absolute conformation rule for sterecenters. Number from greatest to lowest atomic number, if isotopes then go by atomic weight R is clockwise, S is counter-clock  
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Fischer projection   Vertical lines go towards the back, horizontal go to front  
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Enantiomers   mirror image that aren't superimposable. Will have opposite absolute conformations  
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Enantiomers and plane polarized light   A pair of enantiomers will rotate plane polarized light with equal magnitude but in opposite directions.  
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Optically active   Compound that rotates polarized light. If cloclwise then dextrorotatory (d) (+). If counterclockwise then levorotatory (l) (-). Racemic mixture (50-50 mix) has a specific rotation of 0 degrees  
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Number of possible stereoisomers   2^n n=# of chiral centers  
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Diastereomers   Steroisomers that aren't enantiomers. So they are nonsuperimposable nonmirro images. One of the chiral centers has the same absolute configuration while the other changes.  
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Specific rotation for diastereomers   They differ. No specific relationship between the specific rotations for the diastereomers. Also they have different melting points, bo, solubilities, dipole moments....  
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Enantiomer similarities   Tend to have similar mp, bp, solubility, dipole... etc. Unlike diastereomers.  
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Epimers   THey are diastereomer where only one chiral center was inverted (Epimeric carbon)  
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Magnitude and sign of specific rotation   Can only be known through experimentation.  
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Anomers   Epimers that form a ring structure  
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Meso compounds   Compound with two chiral centers (all have same atoms attached), but it has innternal symetry (S and R, or R and S). Therefore instead of 2^n possibilities it's only 2^n -1 They are optically inactive.  
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Mose compounds are optically.....   Inactive  
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Geometric isomers   Diasteromers that differ in orientation of substituents around a ring or double bond. Two high priority n same side is cis, other is trans  
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Two factors influencing bp and mp of hydrocarbons   Branching decreases the vanderwaal forces so it has lower mp and bp. Molecular weight also because the greater then MW the more surface for forces to interact and the higher mp and bp.  
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Three types of reaction intermediates   Carbocations, alkyl radicals or carbanions.  
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Carbocations   sp2 with empty p orbital.  
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Alkyl radicals   Since they are electron deficient they are kind of like carbocations. sp2 with unpaired electron in p orbital  
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Carbanion   sp2 with lone pair in p or sp3 with unpair in sp3  
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Two ways to stabilize organic intermediates   Inductive effect s(sigma bonds) or resonance effects (delocalization of pi bonds)  
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Carbocations and alkyl radicals are more stable with   30, 20, 10 and methyl (more stable to least)  
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Conjugated system   3 or more atoms that bear p orbital  
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Organic compound acidity   Strong acids > sulfonic acids > carboxylic acids > phenols > alcohols and water > carbonyl compounds > sp > sp2 > sp3 (PAGE 87)  
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Ringstrain   triangle and square. unstable.  
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Hydrogenation reactions for cycloalkanes   Works best for cyclopropanes and cyclobutane because they want to break free from the ring. Cyclopentane... hexane.. and up don't have ring strain so they don't react.  
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Free radical halogenation (termination and inhibition and racemization) of alkanes   Page 101. One halogen radical form can give rise to a bunch of others. Racemization with top or bottom addition of halogen. Termination when radicals end (X + X) (R + R) (R + X) Inhibition by molecular O because R. + O=O ---> R-O-O.  
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Selectivity   Selectivity = reactivity/site available  
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Br vs Cl selectivity   Br are much more selective than Cl for bromination and chlorination of alkanes. Most selective... I > Br > Cl > F  
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Which is a nucleophile, lewis base or lewis acid?   Lewis base.  
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Nucleophiles   Unshared pair of electrons or pi bonds and frequently a negative or partially negatibr vharge  
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Nucleophilicity trend   Increases as negative charge increases. Increases down a periodic table and left. Down a group is larger atoms and more polarizable (ability to distorn an atom around it). to the left because of less electronegativity  
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SN2 basics   Depends on 2 (conc. of nucleophile and electrophile. 1 step. Nucleophilic attack from the back. Better in aprotic solvent (acetone, DMF, DMSO) b/c H bonding solvents will solvate nucleophile. Bulky electrophiles inhibit. Cause stereochemical inversion.  
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What forms in an SN1   A carbocation!  
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Two distinct steps in SN1   Halogen takes itself out, so carbocation remains, then nucleophilic attacks from either side. Racemic mixture.  
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Unimolecular   reaction rate depends on only one variable. Ex. SN1  
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SN1 basics   Two step. Only dependent on electrophile concentration. Reaction rate also depends on how stable the carbocation will be. Protic solvents (water or alcohol) because stabilizaes cation and solvate the leaving group. Also solvolysis (solvent attacks carbcat  
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Ether and acid   First the acid protonates ether (positive sign on O, making it a good leaving group). The base becomes the nucleophile and the R group the electrophile with al alcohol as the leaving group. Can go SN1 or SN2 once protonation occurs.  
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Thiols   R-SH  
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Amine   NR3  
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Know imine vs amide vs. amine   Page 20  
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Alkyl vs aryl amines   Aryl amines have the nitrogen bound to sp2 carbon and is part of an aromatic ring  
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Amines aren't chiral because....   They can rapidly covert from one side to another.  
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Alkylation of amines   primary, secondary amines and others can do SN2 against alkyl halide replacing its H with the alkane. This repeats until tert amine which doesn't have lone e- pair  
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E1 elimination   Protic solvent prefered. Two steps. Dependent on substrate (just one, the thing being eliminated)  
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Substrate reactibity for SN1, SN2, E1 and E2   SN2 prefers less substituted because of steric hinderance. SN1 prefers more substituted for stability of carbocation. E1 prefers more substituted because of carbocation stability. E2 prefers more substituted because they are more likely to eliminate (?)  
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Dehydrations of alcohol? E1? E2?   It's E1. Acid protonates OH of alcohol, H2O leaves, carbocation remains, conjugate base picks up H and double bond forms. Watch out for hydride and methide shifts.  
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E2   Aprotic base. Watch out for bulky bases because they'll only pick up the most outer hydrogens. Depends on amount of base and substrate. Pick E2 over E1 by using stronger base.  
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Methods for creating alkyl halides   Free-radical halogenation Alcohol + acid Substitution with other halides Alcohol + phosphorus halides (PBr3, PCl3) Alcohol + thionyl chloride (SOCl2)  
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Mrkovnikov's rule   Addition reactions. The most table carbocation intermediate is always formed, then it will go SN1 by halogen or do hydride shifts to gain more stability and then undergo SN1.  
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Hydration of alkenes   Acid-catalyzed (water is the nucleophile, but H3O provides the H for hydration) Oxymercuration-Demercuration  
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Oxymercuration-Demercuration is used for   To form a markovnikov alcohol (hydration of alkenes). Cationic 3 membered cyclic intermediate forms. No carbon skeleton rearrangement happens. Water opens ring at most substituted carbon.  
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Markonikov alcohol means...   The OH group is in the most sustituted Carbon. Anti markonikov means the opposite  
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Hydroboration alkenes   antimarkovnikov alcohols, where OH and H added are syn (same side of double bond). Uses BH3 and oxidation with H2O2  
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Antimarkonikov halogen alkanes synthesis   HBr in presence of peroxyde. Syn addition  
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Dihalogenations of alkenes   Addition of X2. First Br-Br molecule splits and one of the Br forms a 3 membered cyclic molecule with Br at the tip, then the Br comes close to another Br2 molecule induces dipole and it breaks open the ring. Stereochemistry is anti.  
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Alkene + H2O + Br2   In the presence of H2O, OH and Br are added anti.  
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Alkene + peroxy acid   Epoxide intermediate is formed. Then two OH added tans to where the double bond was (trans diols)  
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Peroxy acid   Page. 152  
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Epoxide   Pg. 153  
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KMnO4 + alkene   cis-diols formation. Organometallic intermediate helps OH to form cis.  
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Hydrogenation of alkenes and alkynes   H2 in presence of metal catalyst (Ni, Pd, Pt). Syn addition. Need 2 equiv of H2 for alkynes  
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Alkyne hydration to stop at alkene in cis mode   Use CaCO3 or BaSO4 to stop at alkene level and get cis. These reagents are known as "Lindlar catalyst"  
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Alkyne hydration to stop at alkene in trans mode   Use Na and liquid ammonia (NH3)  
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Ozonolysis   O3 reacts with pi bond to make cyclic intermediate "ozonide", hydrolyzed to yield aldehyde and ketone.  
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Criteria for aromatic compounds   1. Cyclic 2. Cyclic delocalized p orbital system must be flat and planar 3. Delocalized p orbital must have Huckel number of pi electrons  
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Huckel numbers   4n + 2 = #pi electrons n can only be a whole number  
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electrophilic aromatic substitution   Only with very electrophilic reagents  
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Ring activating bs ring deactivating groups   Groups on aromatic compounds that make subspitution easier (activating/electron giving) or harder (deactivating/electron withdrawing).  
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Ortho/para   -NR3, -OH (very strong activator) -OR, -NH(C=O)R, -O(C=O)R, -R (moderate activator) -Cl, Br, I (mild deactivators)  
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Meta   -NR3, -NO2, C(triple bond)N (very strong deactivator) -SO3H, (C=O)R, (C=O)OH, (C=O)OR, (C=O)NH2, and -NH3 (moderate-mild deactivators(  
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Ortho/para directing groups have   Lone pairs of electrons on the atom of attachment to the aromatic ring  
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Oxidants   Chromic acid, chromate salts, dichromate salts, permanganate, chromium trioxide (all these are aq oxidants), and pyridinium chlorochromate (PCC) (anhydrous oxidant)  
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Enolate ion   Resonance stabilized carbanion. Negatively chargeda nd nucleophilic.  
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Keto-Enol Tautomerism   page 179  
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Organometallic reagents   Perform nucleophillic additions to carbonyl carbons. Basic structure is R- M+. Function as either strong bases or nucleophiles. Ex. Grignard and lithium reagents  
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Grignar reagent   Organomettalic reagent. Made by action of alkyl halide on magnesium.  
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