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Unctional Roups: Efining A Olecule S Eactivity

Most molecules contain functional groups, which are specific arrangements of atoms that determine a molecule's reactivity. Common functional groups include alcohols, ethers, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, amines, amides, and phosphate groups. Many functional groups have characteristic odors, such as the vinegar smell of small carboxylic acids or the ammonia smell of small amines. Functional groups determine whether a molecule is acidic, basic, or neutral based on pH.

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Chuckie Cabrera
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Unctional Roups: Efining A Olecule S Eactivity

Most molecules contain functional groups, which are specific arrangements of atoms that determine a molecule's reactivity. Common functional groups include alcohols, ethers, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, amines, amides, and phosphate groups. Many functional groups have characteristic odors, such as the vinegar smell of small carboxylic acids or the ammonia smell of small amines. Functional groups determine whether a molecule is acidic, basic, or neutral based on pH.

Uploaded by

Chuckie Cabrera
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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D EFINING A M OLECULE S R EACTIVITY: F UNCTIONAL G ROUPS

O DORS

Many functional groups have distinctive odors.

Small carboxylic acids smell like acetic acid (vinegar), while larger ones have unpleasant odors. Most esters, if volatile, have pleasant odors that is why esters are used extensively in the flavor and perfume industry. Most sulfur-containing compounds have strong unpleasant odors. Small amines have an ammonia odor, whereas larger amines have a fishy odor or worse.

Most carbon compounds have one or more reactive sites composed of a specific grouping of atoms in their structure.
These specific grouping of atoms that react are called functional groups.

H YDROCARBONS

compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen, Alkanes - no traditional functional groups.

Alkenes and alkynes - contain a carbon-carbon double and triple bond, respectively.
Aromatic hydrocarbons - normally ring structures with alternating single and double carbon-tocarbon bonds, contain one or more aromatic systems, which are much less reactive than other systems containing double bonds.

F UNCTIONAL GROUPS WITH


OXYGEN AND SULFUR

Ether groups are known as glycoside linkages.

Carboxylic acids and esters are important functional groups that appear as fatty acids and in fats and oils.

Contain both singly and doubly bonded oxygen atoms. carbonyl group - The combination of a carbon atom connected to an oxygen atom by a double bond.

Alcohols and ethers contain only singly bonded oxygen atoms. An alcohol group attached to an aromatic ring is a phenol.

Aldehydes and ketones contain only doubly bonded oxygen atoms.

Sulfur, the element immediately below oxygen on the periodic table, may replace oxygen in both alcohols and ethers to give thiols (mercaptans) and thioethers. Sulfur may also form a disulfide where there is a bond between two sulfur atoms.

F UNCTIONAL GROUPS
CONTAINING NITROGEN

Amines and amides are two important functional groups containing nitrogen.

Amines are present in amino acids and alkaloids. Amides are present in proteins, where they are known as peptide bonds.

Alkaloids are basic compounds produced by plants. Examples include nicotine, caffeine, and morphine.

F UNCTIONAL GROUPS
CONTAINING PHOSPHORUS

Phosphate groups come from phosphoric acid, H3PO4. The phosphate groups may be alone, part of a diphosphate, part of a triphosphate, or part of a phosphate ester.

Phosphates appear in teeth and bone and are a part of the energy transport molecules ATP and ADP.

P H AND FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

It is important to know which functional groups are acidic, basic, or neutral. Neutral functional groups behave the same no matter what the pH is.

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