Quimica Organica Spellbook Flashcards
Mass spectrometry involves the production and detection of:
A) positively charged species
B) negatively charged species
C) neutral species
D) positively and negatively charged species
(A). Mass spectrometry uses high energy to break the covalent bonds in molecular compounds and the instrument only detects the positively charged species resulting in this fragmentation process.
Which of these statements best explains why an aromatic alkyl halide is most reactive?
A) the ether product formed from it is the most thermodynamically stable
B) the activation energy needed to form a carbocation from it is the lowest
C) it is the least sterically hindered to nucleophilic attack by ethanol
D) the ether product formed from it is more soluble in ethanol
B. The lower the reaction’s activation energy is, the faster its rate will be.
What are the conditions necessary for a molecule to be antiaromatic?
- Must be cyclic
- Must be planar
- Must have a completely conjugated system of p-orbitals in the ring of the molecule
- Must have 4n pi electrons (4, 8, 12, etc…)*
* The number of double bonds multiplied by 2.
What is the reaction kinetics associated with SN1 and SN2 reactions?
SN1: First order kinetics k[Substrate]
SN2: Second order kineitcs k[Nu][Substrate]
How many isoprene units make up the structure of the terpene compound caryophyllene?
3 terpene units. All terpene compounds are composed of different numbers of isoprene molecules. Each isoprene molecule contains 5 carbons. The compound shown is composed of 3 isoprene units because it contains 15 carbons.
Which of the following is not true about the reaction solvent used (THF) to prepare the Grignard reagent?
A) it conains an ether functional group
B) it is capable of hydrogen bonding
C) it helps solvate the grignard reagent as it forms
D) it is a cyclic compound
(B) THF is a cyclic saturated ether. Ethers cannot hydrogen bond.
What would be the strongest expected intermolecular interaction between sodium acetate (the solute) and water (the solvent) in a solution?
A) hydrogen bonding
B) dipole-dipole interaction
C) ion-dipole interaction
D) dispersion forces
(C) The solute is the salt of acetic acid and being ionic would completely ionize when dissolved in water–the solvent. The sodium and acetate ions would be surrounded and seperated by polarized water; thus the interactions between the solute and solvent species are ion-dipole.
The λmax UV/VIS for trans-β-carotene (a yellow compound with elevent conjugated bonds) would be closest to:
A) 300 nm
B) 350 nm
C) 400 nm
D) 500 nm
(C) Because this is a yellow compound, it absorb radiation in the violet (~400 nm) part of the visible region of the electromagnetic radiation.
Which is more stable: cis-1,3-dibromocyclohexane or trans-1,3-dibromocyclohexane?
cis-1-3-dibromocyclohexane because the bromines can both be equatorial but in trans, they cannot.
A compound was produced as a cis/trans isomer mixture. What would probably be the best laboratory method for separation this mixture?
a) recrystallization
b) extraction
c) chromatography
d) distillation
(C) their boiling points are likely to be similar, so separation by chromatography techique would exploit the small differences in the isomers affinity for a carefully selected stationary phase..
The Lucas test distinguishes between the presence of primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols based on reactivity with a hydrogen halide. The corresponding alkyl chlorides are insoluble in Lucas reagent and turn the solution cloudy at the same rate that they react with the reagent. The alcohols A, B, and C are solvated separately in Lucas reagent of hydrochloric acid and zinc chlroide. If alcohols are primary, secondary, and tertiary, respectively, what is the order of their rates of reaction from fastest to slowest?
C, B, A. SN1 reactions are much faster than SN2 reactions, which would only react in the primary alcohol. So because this is SN1, it will go from most stable (C) to least stable (A).
What are the reaction kinetics for SN1 and SN2?
SN1: rate = k[S]
SN2: rate = k[S][Nucleophile]