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Jack's Chemistry Revision Notes

or...

Why you'd have to be mad to study chemistry


VERSION 0.2.0 - 16 MAY 1999


Atomic Structure (1.1)


A - mass number

Z - number of protons


Mass spectrometer [1]

Vaporised sample is ionised, accelerated by an electric field, deflected by a magnet and made to hit a detector.


Order of electron shells [2]


1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p


[Ar] = 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6


Ionisation energy across period 2 [3]

1. Shielding by existing electron orbitals causes this.

eg. Boron shielded by whole 2s orbital.


                      2. Pair effects

                      Nitrogen has 3 unpaired p electrons.

Oxygen has 2 unpaired p electrons, and a pair. It is easier to remove one of the p electrons from oxygen than from nitrogen, because there are less unpaired electrons.



Amount of Substance (1.2)

Misc [4]


Avogadro Constant = 6.0 x 1023 per mole


Ar = relative atomic mass

Mr = relative molecular mass

Mr is measured relative to Carbon 12.


Ideal Gas Equation [5]


pV = nRT


(R = 8.31JK-1mol-1)



Bonding (1.3)



Bond types [6]


Co-ordinate: A covalent bond where both electrons are from the same atom.

Metallic: lattice of +ve ions surrounded by delocalised electrons.


Pauling's scale of electronegativity [7]


Scale from 0.7 to 4.0.

electronegativity is the power of an atom to withdraw e- density from a covalent bond

Covalent bonds are not always symmetrical: they may be polarised:


eg. NaCl is truly ionic, MgCl2 has some covalent character, and AlCl3 and SiCl4 are covalent.


Intermolecular bonds: Hydrogen bonding [8]


(lone pair(s) and high electronegativity required for the O atom)


This is why water has an oddly high boiling pt.

(H2S = -50OC, H2Se = -30OC, but H2O = 100OC)


H-bonds are very strong (less than covalent bonds though) and are called permanent bonds.


NH3 can make 1 hydrogen bond, HF can make 3.


How it works: electrons on the H are pulled away by the high electronegativity of the other atom, leaving an exposed side of the proton, which attracts negative areas on other molecules, eg. Lone pairs.


Intermolecular bonds: Dipole-dipole attraction [9]


weaker than H-bonding:-


dipole-dipole attraction between O and C where the dipole is.









Intermolecular bonds: Van der Waals forces [10]

Non-polar molecules do have I/M forces, they are the induced dipole-dipole type.

e- movement induces a dipole in a molecule. These forces are attracting and breaking all the time.


Bond Rules

All things have Van der Waals I/M forces. If a molecule has a difference in electronegativity across it (i.e. A dipole) then there will also be dipole-dipole attraction. And if one of the atoms has very high electronegativity and lone pairs (N, O, F), and is bonded to a hydrogen atom, then hydrogen bonding will also exist.


Types of crystal [11]





Repulsion rule [12]


A lone pair of electrons produces a greater repulsion effect than a bonding pair.


lone pair - lone pair repulsion > lone pair - bonding pair repulsion > bonding pair - bonding pair repulsion


Periodicity (1.5)







Patterns in period 3 [17]


Period #3 is a bit like period #2.


- For metals, melting point increases as the charge/size ratio increases - better metallic bonding.

- Silicon is macromolecular, so it has very strong bonds. (covalent bonds linking all atoms together)

- The final elements are simple molecular: with weak Van der Waals I/M forces.

(increasing nuclear charge => electrons attracted more strongly)



Extra Solid Types

PCl5 actually exists as an ionic solid consisting of PCl4+ and PCl6 -. AlCl3 is a solid dimer at room temperature.


Patterns down group 1 [18]


Group I metals react with water to form metal hydroxides and hydrogen:

2Na + 2H2O -> H2 + 2NaOH


Metal oxides and chlorides [19]


MgO, SO2, MgCl2, and AlCl3 can be formed by direct combination (burning).


Reactions of oxides of period 3 elements with water [20]


Basic element

Na2O

Dissolves slowly to form strong alkali

MgO

Dissolves slowly to form weak alkali

Amphoteric element

Al2O3

Does not react

Acidic element

SiO2

Does not react

P4O10

Forms phosphoric acid soln.

SO2

Forms sulphuric acid soln.

SO3

Forms sulphuric acid soln.


So, the metals form alkalis, and the non-metals/metalloids either form acids or do not react.


Reactions of chlorides of period 3 elements with water [21]


NaCl

Dissolve easily, solution pretty neutral

MgCl2

Al2Cl6

Reacts vigorously with water, produces HCl fumes

Solution acidic, pH 2 or 3.

SiCl4

PCl5


Additional Notes on periodicity [22]


In each period the oxides of the metals and metalloids have giant structures, whereas the oxides of non-metals are composed of simple molecules.



From left to right, the oxides of all these molecules change from being ionic, involatile, and metallic, through being giant molecular, involatile and amphoteric, to being simple molecular, volatile, and acidic.


Lithium (thermal stability of compounds) [23]





The Halogens (2.4)


[40]

Most electronegative: Fluorine

Highest boiling point: Astatine

Best oxidising agent: Fluorine

Best reducing agent: Astatide ions

(I/M forces are just Van der Waals)


Products of reactions between NaX and Sulphuric Acid [41]

(where X is a halogen): NaX + H2SO4(conc)


Halide ions can reduce sulphur in H2SO4 by varying degrees. In H2SO4 the S has oxidation state +6. Iodide ions are able to reduce this to +4 (SO2), 0 (S) and -2 (H2S).

reagent

product

NaF

HF

NaCl

HCl

NaBr

HBr and a little Br2 and SO2

NaI

I2 and a little HI and S, H2S, SO2

NaBr and NaI are oxidised in the reaction, but HF and HCl cannot be oxidised by the acid.


Br2 is a brown gas. I2 is a purple gas, and a black precipitate.


Reactions of Cl


[42] ..with water: chlorine + water -> hydrochloric acid + hypochlorous acid

Cl2 + H2O -> H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + HClO(aq)


Cl is simultaneously reduced and oxidised - a disproportionation.

The product is also known as chlorine water. It is used to make bleach and treat water, and kills germs.


[43] ..with NaOH

This reaction depends on concentration and temperature.

At room temperature and using dilute NaOH:


Cl2 + 2OH- -> Cl-(aq) + ClO-(aq) + H2O(aq)


Forms Sodium Hypochlorite which is a bleach.


Testing for halides [44]

Silver nitrate (AgNO3) can be used to detect halide ions.


halide ion + silver nitrate -> nitrate ion + silver halide

or, for reaction with X- (halide)

X- + Ag+ + NO3- -> NO3- + AgX(s)


X can be identified from the colour of the silver halide AgX: [45]

AgI(s) is yellow

AgBr(s) is creamy colour

AgCl(s) is white


X can also be identified by dissolving the silver halide in ammonium hydroxide: [46]

AgI(s) doesn't dissolve

AgBr(s) partially dissolves

AgCl(s) dissolves fully



Kinetics (3.1)






Maxwell-Boltzmann Distribution [47]

DrawObj

increasing T shifts to right


Area under curve is total number of particles





Reaction rate [48]


Rate = Damount / Dtime or Dconcentration / Dtime


The rate is affected by:

  1. state of division (i.e. The surface area, powdered form is faster)

  2. temperature (more energy -> more collisions have required Ea)

    (a small increase in T may lead to a large increase in rate)

  3. concentration (increased P(collision))

  4. catalyst (provides alternate route with lower Ea)


Rate equation [50]


Rate = k [A]m[B]n


m and n are the orders of the reaction with respect to reagents A and B.

k is the rate constant.


Thermodynamics & Energetics (4.1 1.4)



Enthalpy [74]


Definition: Enthalpy (H) is the energy content at constant pressure.

Standard enthalpy changes (DHQ) refer to standard conditions: 1 atm, 298K, 1M


Types of Enthalpy [75]


+ve means that energy goes from surroundings to system (i.e. Endothermic)

Ionisation enthalpy

One mole of e- from gaseous atoms

DHQI 1

+ve

Electron affinity

One mole of e- added to gaseous atoms

DHQe 1

-ve

Lattice dissociation enthalpy

Ionic solid dissociating to gaseous atoms

DHQlatt

+ve

Solution enthalpy

One mole of ionic solid dissolving in water to make aqueous ions

DHQsoln

+ve

Enthalpy of hydration

1 mole Gaseous ions forming aqueous ions

DHQhyd

-ve

Enthalpy of combustion

Buring 1 mole of reagents in standard states

DHQc

-ve

Enthalpy of formation

Forming 1 mole of something in standard state from elements in standard states

DHQf


Enthalpy of sublimation

Making 1 mole of gaseous atoms

DHQsub

+ve

Enthalpy of atomisation

Often the same as sublimation.

DHQdiss

+ve


Hess's Law [14]


Total Denthalpy is independent of the reaction route taken.



Bond Enthalpy [76]

Bond Enthalpy is the definite amount of energy associated with each chemical bond. Bond enthalpies can be used to predict whether or not, and how easily two substances will react.


bond breaking - endothermic

bond making - exothermic


example: all the bonds in CH4 are identical C-H bonds with the same bond enthalpy, E(C-H). To break all four, 4E(C-H) is required.


DH ( CH4(g) -> C(g) + 4H(g) ) = 4E(C-H)


Generally, the lower the bond enthalpy, the weaker the bond.


When heat or light can break bonds, it will usually break the weakest (lower bond enthalpy) first.


eg. Cracking works because C-C bonds are weaker than H-C bonds (C-C bonds split homolytically to form radicals).

eg. H2 + Cl2 works because Cl-Cl bonds split in the presence of light. (initiation, propagation, termination steps..)



Molecule shapes [16]



Linear

180


V-shaped

105


Tetrahedral

109.5


Pyramidal

107


Planar

120


Both tetrahedral

109.5


Trigonal bipyramidal

90 and 120


Octahedral

90



Spontaneous reactions [78]


DH, whilst important, is not sufficient to explain spontaneous change.

=> spontaneous exothermic change (eg. burning) makes sense in terms of DH but spontaneous endothermic change does not.


Entropy (S) [79]


UNITS: JK-1mol-1 (NOT kJ)


Positive DS for a reaction indicates that the reaction is feasible (ie. spontaneous).


S rules of thumb [80]



2nd law of thermodynamics [81]


DStotal = DSsystem + DSsurroundings

DStotal must be positive because overall entropy is always increasing.


And because DSsystem = DSSproducts - DSSreactants

and DSsurroundings = - DH / T


the feasibility of a reaction can be determined by calculating the DSsystem and DSsurroundings from databook values. If DStotal is positive, the reaction is feasible at that temperature. Thus the feasibility of a reaction depends on the balance between entropy and enthalpy. [82]


Gibbs free energy change [83]


DG = DHsystem - TDSsystem


For a feasible reaction DG must be zero or negative, note this is the opposite way round to DS.



Equilibria (4.2 2.1)


Many reactions are reversible. At equilibrium, both forward and reverse reactions are proceeding. For a homogenous system in equilibrium, where: A + B <-> C + D,


Kc = Right / Left = [C]eq[D]eq / [A]eq[B]eq


[25] Le Chatelier's principle: The system resists change.

=> Increase conc. of something, it reduces it.



But Kc depends on temperature. The effect of T can be clearly defined:


DG = - RT ln K




Partial pressure and Kp [85]

=> partial pressure is analogous to concentration


The partial pressure of a gas in a gas mixture is the pressure that would be exerted if that gas alone filled the whole volume occupied by the mixture (Dalton's law)


partial pressure PA = Ptotal x mole fraction

(PA of oxygen in air is 0.2 atm, as this is 1/5 of 1 atm (4 parts nitrogen, 1 part oxygen))


Kp is the equilibrium constant for a gas system:

Kp = Right / Left = P(C)eqP(D)eq / P(A)eqP(B)eq


Note that changing pressure of the system does not affect KP, but changing temperature does affect KP.



Contact Process [26]


Haber Process [27]



Acid-Base Equilibria (4.3 2.2)

Bronsted-Lowry: acid is a proton donor, base is a proton acceptor

In any acid-base reaction a proton is transferred.


pH [30]


pH = - log [H+] (H+ in moldm-3)


Dissociation of water [31]


Water is very weakly dissociated: Kc = [H+][OH-] / [H2O]

The ionic product of water, Kw = [H+][OH-]

At 25OC only, Kw = 10-14 mol2dm-3.


pH of a strong base found by finding [H+]: Kw = [H+] x [OH-].



>>> Dissociations are always written with ions on the right.

Therefore, as Kc = right / left, Ka, Kc etc are always ions / molecules.


- Ions Right -


Monoprotic weak acids


A weak acid is only partially dissociated: HA <-> H+(aq) + A-(aq)

The dissociation constant, Ka, is found by:

Ka = [H+(aq)][A-(aq)] / [HA]


The higher the value of Ka, the stronger the acid.


Diprotic weak acids

These are like monoprotic weak acids, except they dissociate twice, producing 2H+.

One example is H2S(aq):

H2S <-> HS-(aq) + H+(aq)

HS-(aq) <-> S2-(aq) + H+(aq)


There are two values of Ka, Ka1, and Ka2:-


Ka1 = [HS-][H+] / [H2S]

Ka2 = [S2-][H+] / [HS-]


Ka2 is always much less than Ka1.


Finding Ka

Ka may be found by this approximation, as [H+] Z [HA-], and [H+] Z 0. (as very few H+ come from the water that the acid is in)


Ka Z [H+]2 / [HA]


Finding pH

and so, if [HA] and Ka are known for a weak acid, it's pH can be calculated:


[H+] Z ( [HA] x Ka )

=> pH Z -log10 ( [HA] x Ka )


pKa

pKa is a pH-like scale for Ka.

pKa = -log10 Ka


pH and pKa

You can combine the above two equations to make:

pH Z ½pKa - ½log [HA]


Weak bases

Just as Ka = [H+][A-] / [HA] for weak acids,

Kb = [B+][OH-] / [BOH] for weak bases.

Kb Z [OH-]2 / [BOH]


pH Z ½pKa + ½pKw + ½log [BOH]



pH Curves


All acid/base titrations produce a pH graph like the one on the left. (a mirror image for an acid added to an alkali)


The endpoint is where the titration should finish: where equal amounts of acid and base have reacted.

Also known as the equivalence point where acid and base are equivalent.



Indicators change colour within a narrow pH range. The right indicator has to be used to show when the titration reaches the endpoint. This isn't always pH = 7 though.


For a strong acid and strong alkali, endpoint is about pH 7.

For a weak acid and strong alkali, endpoint is greater than pH 7.

For a strong acid and weak alkali, endpoint is less than pH 7.

For a weak acid and weak alkali, endpoint is about pH 7.


The indicator should show when the mixture is close to the endpoint.


indicator

Changes between...

Methyl Orange

3 and 4.6

Phenolphthalein

8 and 10


Buffers



Acid buffer: If H+ ions are added, they will react with the ethanoate ions from the salt (because there are more of them than ethanoate ions from the partially dissociated acid). Undissociated ethanoic acid will form. If OH- ions are added, they will combine with the H+ ions to form water, and more of the acid will dissociate.


Alkaline buffer: same sort of mechanism


Uses of buffers



Redox Titration Facts


MnO4 reduces to Mn2+

Cr2O7 2- reduces to 2Cr3+



Redox Equilibria (4.4)


The anode is where the oxidation reaction occurs.


Usually, electrodes are a sample of a metal in a solution of the same metal ions. If M = Zn and soln is ZnSO4(aq):


Zn(s) | ZnSO4(aq)

or

Zn(s) | Zn 2+(aq)


both describe this electrode.




Gas electrode


Sometimes a gas electrode must be used. Here the gas under test is bubbled over a platinum electrode in a solution of ions of the same element as the gas. eg. The standard hydrogen electrode is described as:


Pt (s) | H2(g) | H+(aq)


Standard


The standard for half cells is that everything happens under standard conditions (1 atm for gases, 298K, and 1M solutions).


Redox electrodes


This is where something in solution is either oxidised or reduced, but remains in solution. eg.

Pt (s) | Fe2+(aq) Fe3+(aq)


-> a solution containing 1M iron (II) and 1M iron (III) ions. e- produced by oxidation of Fe2+ or lost by reduction of Fe3+ enter or leave the solution by the Pt electrode.


Cell reactions - standard layout


Zn(s) | ZnSO4(aq) || CuSO4(aq) | Cu(s)



The oxidation cell is put on the left. The overall reaction where oxidation of the left cell occurs is feasible if the left cell potential is less than the right cell potential.


Word Association

Oxidation occurs at the Anode on the Left which is Negative


POSITIVE POTENTIALS OXIDISE OTHERS


ie. the best oxidising agents have the highest E values.


Standard Cell Potential


Standard cell potential, EQ is measured with the Standard Hydrogen Electrode (SHE) as the left hand electrode, and standard conditions. Cells with high E values are the best oxidising agents: they accept e- easily.


Calculating E


Ecell = Eright - Eleft


Ecell is usually calculated by putting the most positive cell on the right.


Secondary standard

A calomel electrode with an EQ value of +0.27V is often used in place of the SHE.


POSITIVE POTENTIALS OXIDISE OTHERS


Principles of Catalytic Action (4.5)


Heterogeneous catalytic action


A heterogeneous catalyst is in a different state to the reagents. One (or more) of the reagents is adsorbed onto the catalyst surface, making it more likely to react with the others. For example, it may become more accessible to collisions, or be held in a particularly active configuration, or be broken into more reactive fragments.


The strength of adsorption is very important. Tungsten adsorbs too well. Silver adsorbs poorly. So Ni and Pt are more commonly used.


A support medium minimises the amount of catalyst while maximising the catalyst surface area.


Homogenous catalytic action


The reaction goes through an intermediate species. If a transition metal catalyst is used, it's oxidation state changes.


Specificity


Catalysts are often highly specific. Enzymes will work for only one reaction. Acid/base catalysts (eg. Acid used to catalyse hydrolysis of an ester) are much more general.


Some Catalysts [35]


Transition metals often make good catalysts (change in oxidation state)

Iron -> Haber process

MnO2 -> decomposition of H2O2

Ni -> margarine (hydrogenation of vegetable oil)



Extraction of Metals (5.1)


Extraction of metals usually involves reduction of a metal oxide. There are several reduction methods: the one used depends on the cost of the reductant, the energy requirements, and the purity of the metal required.


Reduction of metal oxides with carbon

eg. production of iron.


  1. Iron oxide is first heated with coke (mostly carbon) in a sintering plant.

  2. Poured into a blast furnace along with more coke.

  3. The carbon reduces the iron oxide to iron:

2Fe2O3 + 3C -> 4Fe + 3CO2

and also, CO produced by incomplete combustion of coke:

Fe2O3 + 3CO -> 2Fe + 3CO2

  1. The impurities (slag) float on top of the liquid iron poured out of the blast furnace.

Waste gases are used to heat the furnace.


Iron can be further purified by:


Carbon reduction is not perfect for all metals, as with some others carbides are formed.


Reduction of metal oxide with an active metal


Mainly used for chromium and in Thermite process. Advantages:


Sort of substitution of one metal for another:

eg. Cr2O3(s) + 2Al(s) -> 2Cr(s) + Al2O3(s)


Reduction of metal oxide by electrolysis

Used for aluminium extraction because Al2O3 is too stable for carbon reduction: the temp would have to be very high. The bauxite is dissolved in molten cryolite (Na3.AlF6) to lower it's melting point from 2000OC to 950OC. Carbon electrodes are used.


Cathode: Al reduced from Al3+ to Al

Anode: Oxide ions oxidised to oxygen


This is a continuous process using much electricity. Cryolite is damaging to the environment.


Reduction of a metal halide by another metal


Used for production of Ti, which is brittle unless very pure. This process produces very pure metal in quantity. Main Ti ore: TiO2.


TiO2 reacted with C and Cl at 900OC to form TiCl4:

TiO2 + 2C + 2Cl2 -> TiCl4(l) + 2CO


TiCl4 is a dangerous product, it hydrolyses easily and forms HCl fumes in moist air.


It is reacted with Na: (at 550OC)

TiCl4(l) + 4Na(s) -> 4NaCl + Ti(s)


This is also a dangerous reaction as it's highly exothermic. (temp rises to 1000OC) The temperatures are so high that the reaction must happen in an inert atmosphere of argon so that titanium oxides are not formed again. It's all very expensive.


additional: H2 can be used as a reducing agent for metals: no carbides are formed.


Transition Metals (5.2 2.3)



General Properties [34]


  1. coloured compounds

  2. variable oxidation state

  3. form complex ions

  4. show catalytic activity


A transition metal has an incomplete d sub-shell in at least one of it's oxidation states. The properties arise from this.


The odd order of e.c.'s [37]

Most of them add 1 normally, eg.


except Chromium and Copper


On ionisation, the 4s shell goes first, then the 3d shell.


Complex formation [39]

complex: central metal ion surrounded by ligands


co-ordination number: number of ligands


[Co(H2O)6]2+ and [Cu(H2O)6]2+ are octahedral.

[CoCl4]2+ and [CuCl4]2+ are tetrahedral.


The Colour Table

Initial Ion

Initial Colour

+HCl Colour

+NH3 Colour

[Cu(H2O)6]2+

Blue

Green

Royal Blue

[Co(H2O)6]2+

Pink

Blue


[Fe(H2O)6]2+

Green



[Fe(H2O)6]3+

Very Pale Violet



[Cr(H2O)6]3+

Ruby


Purple


The colour of ions

is affected by a change in ligands, a change in co-ordination number, or change in oxidation state.


Ligands

A ligand is an electron pair donor.

Unidentate: one tooth: NH3, Cl-

Bidentate: two teeth: ethanedioate ions

Polydentate: many teeth: EDTA, and haemoglobin


Reactions of inorganic compounds in aqueous solutions (5.3)


A Lewis acid is an electron pair acceptor and a Lewis base is an electron pair donor.

(A transition metal is one with a partially filled d sub-shell)


Metal ions form metal-aqua ions in water: [M(H2O)6]2+.

These ions can be present in the solid state: FeSO4.7H2O.


Acidity reaction (hydrolysis)


with water...

M2+ and M3+ ions can lose protons to water to

the extent that they have +1 charge:

[M(H2O)6]2+ + H2O <-> [M(H2O)5(OH)]+ + H3O+



with OH- ions...

M2+ and M3+ ions lose protons as before, but

this time can go a step further

and form a metal hydroxide precipitate.

[M(H2O)4(OH)2]+ + OH- <-> [M(H2O)3(OH)3] + H2O


M3+ pptes can redissolve in OH- ions to form

[M(H2O)2(OH)4]- ions.

M2+ pptes do not redissolve.


with CO32- ions...

M2+ ions form insoluble metal carbonates

(MCO3)

M3+ ions form metal hydroxides and CO2 gas


with NH3 ions...

M2+ and M3+ form hydroxides and then

substitution occurs.


Metal Hydroxide Table


Metal ion

Metal aqua solution

Metal hydroxide ppte

Iron (II)

Green

Green

Cobalt (II)

Pink

Blue green

Iron (III)

Pale violet

Brown

Chromium (III)

Ruby

Green

Aluminium (III)


White



Substitution Complex Ion Table





Ion..

With conc HCl

With dil NH3

With conc NH3

With v. conc NH3

[Cu(H2O)6]2+

blue

[CuCl4]2-

green

[Cu(H2O)4(OH)2]

blue ppte.

[Cu(NH3)4(H2O)2]2+

deep blue

[Cu(NH3)6]2+

royal blue

[Co(H2O)6]2+

pink

[CoCl4]2-

blue

[Co(H2O)4(OH)2]

green/blue ppte


[Co(NH3)6]2+

straw colour

[Cr(H2O)6]3+

ruby




[Cr(NH3)6]3+

purple


-ve ligand substitution

Acidity reaction (NH3 acts as base)


Complete substitution




The Extra Bastard Hard Evil Table


Oxidation state

7

6

5

4

3

2

Vanadium



Orange

Blue

Green

Violet

Manganese

Purple



Dark brown


Pink

Chromium


Orange



Green

Blue


Silver complexes


Silver ions produce linear complexes.

[Ag(NH3)2]+ - used in Tollen's reagent

[Ag(S2O3)2]3- - used in photography

[Ag(CN)2]- - forms when silver salts are dissolved in CN- solutions:

used for electroplating


Transition metal complexes in the body


Haemoglobin is an iron (II) complex. It is surrounded by 4 porphyrin ligands, a globin ligands, and water or oxygen as the sixth ligand.

Cisplatin is an anticancer drug: a 4 co-ordinated complex of Pt2+, ligands are two Cl- ions and two NH3 atoms.



Miscellaneous things


In alkaline solution, Co (II) and Cr (III) are oxidised by H2O2, which acts as an oxidiser or a reducer depending on the conditions.


Co (II) is oxidised by air in ammoniacal solution.



Organic Chemistry (3.2)

Cracking (thermal) [51]


Main fractions of crude oil [52]


Pollutants made by cars [53]


Haloalkanes


aq. soln

warm


this mechanism also applies to OH- ions.




The end result of the above (bromomethane + NaCN) is ethanenitrile, NOT methanenitrile, because the extra C counts as part of the carbon chain.


(haloalkane must be in excess, or secondary amines are formed (multiple substitution))- this makes it less likely that the amine produced will react with Br -, also warm


The NH3 reacts with the acid formed (HBr here): NH3 + HBr -> NH4Br

overall: RX + 2NH3 -> RNH2 + NH4X


(they often want this overall equation for the reaction)


Fluoroalkanes are very unreactive (C-F bond v. strong)


Alcohols [63]


Alcohols: Suitable oxidising agents [64]

  1. Acidified solution of potassium dichromate (VI) (K2Cr2O7)

  1. 3O alcohols "are not easily oxidised".


Alcohols: Dehydration of alcohols to form alkenes [65]

an elimination reaction, reagents conc. sulphuric or conc. phosphoric acid @ 180OC.

  1. acid protonates the lone pair on the OH group

  2. alcohol loses a molecule of water, left with carbonium ion

  3. carbonium ion loses proton to produce an alkene.

The acid is actually a catalyst as it is regenerated.


Carbonyl compounds (having a =O but not -OH) [66]

aldehydes/ketones distinguished by


[67] Carbonyl compounds may be reduced by (a) NaBH4 or (b) H2 gas + Nickel catalyst

symbol for reduction is [H]



Carbonyl reaction with HCN (hydroxynitriles formation) [68]


works for aldehydes and ketones. Reagents: KCN, dilute sulphuric acid

The product is a hydroxynitrile, e.g. 2-hydroxypropanenitrile here.

The carbonyl compound actually reacts with HCN gas which is a product of KCN + acid.


Carboxylic acids + esters [69]

acid + alcohol <-> ester + water

in the presence of a strong acid catalyst (e.g. sulphuric)

ethylmethanoate


(methanoate group on left)







Isomerism [72]

Structural isomer - same molecular formula, different structure

Optical isomer - same structure, not spatially identical

(aka enantiomers, stereoisomers). Rotate light in different dir.

Also geometric isomerism (cis/trans) which are also aka. stereoisomers


Additional [a]

CH4 + Cl2 does not produce any H" radicals.

H2 + Cl2 does.



Aromatic Chemistry (6.1)


Benzene - an arene



All reactions are electrophilic substitution:


A p complex ion (in the middle) is always formed.



Nitration of benzene [60]


Reacts at 50OC with conc. H2SO4 and HNO3, sulphuric acid is catalyst.


HNO3 + 2H2SO4 <-> NO2+ + 2HSO4- + H3O+


Friedel-Crafts Alkylation/acylation

-> where an alkyl/acyl group is added to a benzene ring.


A Friedel-Crafts carrier catalyst is needed, such as AlCl3. (Cl may be any halogen)

The acyl/alkyl group needs to be bonded to the same halogen, eg. Chloromethane.


The carrier catalyst is a Lewis acid, so it will accept a lone pair from the halogen in the alkyl/acyl group (shown as R here):


d+ d-

R - Cl: -> AlCl3

Result: R+AlCl4-


That makes the R group much more d+, so that the benzene ring can attack it:


The AlCl3 is regenerated as the AlCl4- is attacked by the H+ ion to form HCl.



-> Ethene may be used in place of RCl. This reaction is used to make ethylbenzene (styrene) used for making polystyrene. An additional HCl catalyst is needed, temp. 90OC


Sulphonation


Very concentrated (fuming) sulphuric acid contains the electrophile SO3. When





Amines (6.2)


General formula: R-NH2


R can be an alkyl or an aryl (benzene) group. If the amine group is the main functional group, then compounds are named as -amine, eg. Phenylamine. If not, then they are named amino- eg. 2-aminopropane.


Named like alcohols. You can have primary, secondary and tertiary amines.


Amines have base properties. They are lone pair donors.


Methylamine is the best base: the availability of a lone pair is increased by the methyl group, because that group is an electron releasing group: it does not pull on the electrons.


Phenylamine is the worst base: the lone pair on the N is less available, as it is delocalised along with the e- in the benzene ring.


Ammonia is somewhere between the two, in terms of basic strength.


Reactions of amines


The C-N bond in amines is weak compared to the C-O bond in alcohols, and it's also less polar. Amines tend to react by nucleophilic substitution.


eg. reaction with haloalkanes.


R-H2N: -> R'-Br -> R-H2N+-R' + Br- -> R-HN-R' + HBr

(in this reaction it is often important to show what the HBr then does (ie. reacts with the amine) as an overall equation)


The reagent was a primary amine. The product is a secondary amine.

Reaction with haloalkanes adds to the order of the amine:

ammonia + haloalkane -> 1O amine

1O amine + haloalkane -> 2O amine

4O amines exist as salts: quaternary ammonium salts, used to make cationic detergents.


The problem with this reaction is that several products are formed, the product reacts again. This may be limited by putting the haloalkane in excess.


Cationic Detergents from quaternary ammonium salts

usually a long hydrocarbon chain, with a positively charged organic group.

Found in nappy cleaners, hair and fabric conditioners. Have poor cleaning properties but good for germicidal use.


Preparing aliphatic amines


Reduction of a nitrile is one method:-


R - CN -> RCH2NH2


Reducing agent: H2 with Ni catalyst (same as reduction (hydrogenation) of ethene to ethane)


Preparing aromatic amines


Usually by reduction of an appropriate nitro compound:


eg. nitrobenzene + [H] -> phenylamine


Same reducing agents will work, also tin in HCl.


Acid chlorides


These reaction by nucleophilic addition elimination, the mechanism's result is similar to substitution, but it's not the same. (Thing to remember: electrons move to the O on the double bond when the C atom is attacked)



In the above mechanism, water reacts with an acid chloride to form a carboxylic acid.

If one of the H's in water was replaced with an R' group (making it an alcohol, HOR') the result would be an ester RCOOR'.


The mechanism will also work for ammonia, making RCOONH2, which is called an amide (on left), and also with amines (general form NHR') to form RCOONHR': a substituted amide.






Reactions of acid anhydrides


This is what an acid anhydride looks like (right).


These are less reactive than acid chlorides. They exist as resonance hybrids: the p electrons can move around between the C-O and C=O bonds.



Acid anhydride + water -> carboxylic acid

Acid anhydride + alcohol -> carboxylic acid + ester

Acid anhydride + ammonia -> carboxylic acid + amide

Acid anhydride + amine -> carboxylic acid + substituted amide


Acid anhydrides may sometimes be used in place of acid chlorides (both are ethanoylating agents): this is better because they are cheaper and react less vigorously, and are therefore safer.




Alkene chemistry (6.3)


Note: Alkenes are unsaturated because of the C=C bond


Inductive effect


Alkenes react by electrophilic addition. A d+ species (eg. H in HBr) adds to the alkene chain on either end of the double bond as that double bond breaks. A carbonium ion is formed at the other end as the bond has broken. (avoid ever saying C+ ion: carbonium is better)


Markovnikov: The carbonium ion is more likely to form on the end of the bond where it will be surrounded by the most alkyl groups. Alkyl groups exert an inductive effect; pushing e- towards the carbonium ion, which makes it more stable, and likely to exist for longer, so that the d- species will be able to bond to it to complete the reaction.


So, in the reaction between propene and HBr, 2-bromopropane is more likely to be formed than 1-bromopropane.



Reaction of alkenes with hydrogen

(hydrogenation: adding hydrogen to ethene (margarine reaction))

Nickel catalyst at 150OC







hydrogenation is NOT hydration. Hydrogenation = adding hydrogen


Reaction of alkenes with bromine



Happens at room temperature.



Reaction of alkenes with steam (hydration)


hydration. Alkenes react with steam at 300OC with Phosphoric acid catalyst,

to form alcohols. PRESSURE: 65 atm. (this is the industrial way to make alcohols)


Reaction of alkenes with sulphuric acid


Propene reacts with concentrated sulphuric acid to form propyl hydrogen sulphate. The electrophile is H+. Product drawn on right:-


Useful for making alcohols. The product hydrolyses (reacts with water) easily.



Propyl hydrogen sulphate + water -> propan-2-ol + sulphuric acid

The sulphuric acid is regenerated.


Making alkenes from haloalkanes: elimination reaction


In aqueous solution haloalkanes react with OH- ions to form alcohols, as the OH- ions act as nucleophiles. In ethanolic solution the OH- ions act as a base, and alkenes are formed.



OH-(eth) could be produced by dissolving KOH in ethanol. Other products would be KBr, and water.


In this reaction a little propanol will always be formed even though the OH- ions are not in aqueous solution. The OH- ions have some nucleophile properties. The reaction type that is favoured depends on:-


Epoxyethane


epoxyethane is manufactured by direct synthesis of ethene and oxygen at 250OC and 1-2MPa with a silver-based catalyst. It is a colourless gas, flammable, explosive and very toxic.


It is a very reactive substance due to the strain on the 3 membered ring (-C-O-C-). The ring is an area of high electron density, so epoxyethane is susceptible to electrophilic attack. Breaking the ring releases much energy.



Structural Determination (6.4)


NMR: Nuclei with an odd mass number have a property known as spin.

Variable magnetic field used: nuclei align with the field (a state) or against it (b state). They may resonate from one state to the other when subjected to radio waves. A constant frequency radio transmitter is used, and the radio wave energy absorbed by resonance is detected by a detector coil. Samples rotates at about 25-35 rotations per second to average out any variations in the magnetic field.


The substance being tested is dissolved in tetrachloromethane, for examination to find 1H nuclei (it contains no 1H). TMS is mixed with this to provide a reference point for spectrometer calibration. TMS is ideal because:


Chemical shift

d = ( external field at resonance of TMS - external field at resonance of sample ) / external field at resonance of TMS


Chemical shift due to a 1H nucleus depends mainly on how well it is shielded by e- density around it. (e- create a small opposing magnetic field) The H in O-H is less shielded than the H in C-H, because O is more electronegative than C and pulls the e- away from the H.


...and then, there's singlets, doublets, triplets, quartets and so on. But that's not so hard.


Fingerprint region less than 1500cm-1.


Mechanism notes



The Reactions and Conditions Table


Reaction

Conditions

Contact Process

2SO2 + O2

450OC, a few atm.

Pt or V2O5 cat.

Haber Process

N2 + 3H2

500OC, 180-300 atm.

Iron oxide catalysts (some K2O, and Al2O3 act as promoters)

Nitration of benzene

50OC, conc. H2SO4 cat

Formation of alcohols/nitriles/amines from haloalkanes

Warm aqueous soln.

Formation of haloalkanes from alkenes

Either: Gas phase

or: conc. aqueous soln of HX (X=hal.)

Hydration of alkenes

300OC, 65 atm.

H3PO4 cat

Hydrogenation of alkenes

H2 gas at 150OC, with Ni catalyst

Oxidation of alcohols

Warmed gently with K2Cr2O7

Goes from orange to green (Cr3+).

Dehydration of alcohols

180OC, conc. H2SO4 or H3PO4 cat

Reduction of carbonyls

Either: NaBH4

or: H2 gas at 150OC, with Ni catalyst

Ethanal + HCN

KCN + dil H2SO4 generates HCN in solution for the reaction

Ammonia + O2 -> NO

900OC, 7 atm, with Pt cat.

Formation of ethylbenzene from benzene and ethene

95OC, AlCl3 cat, in presence of HCl

Formation of alkenes from haloalkanes

Ethanolic soln of KOH.

KOH acts as base.

Sulphonation of benzene

80OC, with fuming H2SO4

Formation of epoxyethane

250-300OC, 10-20 atm, silver-based catalyst

Formation of ethane-1,2-diol

60OC, H2SO4 cat

excess of water

Formation of alkoxyalcohols (short chain ones)

Typically 180OC, 10 atm




** end of chemistry **