ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 4/E, Paula Yurkanis Bruice,
ISBN: 0-13-140748-1, Prentice Hall, 2004.
Each chapter concludes with Key Terms, Problems, and a Summary.
I. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
1. Electronic Structure and Bonding—Acids and Bases.
The Structure of an Atom. The Distribution of
Electrons in an Atom. Ionic, Covalent, and Polar Bonds. Representation of
a Structure. Atomic Orbitals. An Introduction to Molecular Orbital Theory.
Bonding in Methane and Ethane: Single Bonds. Bonding in Ethane: A Double Bond.
Bonding in Ethyne: A Triple Bond. Bonding in the Methyl Cation, the Methyl
Radical, and the Methyl Anion. Bonding in Water. Bonding in Ammonia and the
Ammonium Ion. Bonding in the Hydrogen Halides. Summary: Orbital Hybridization,
Bond Lengths, Bond Strengths, and Bond Angles. Dipole Moments of Molecules.
An Introduction to Acids and Bases. Organic Acids and Bases; pK a
and pH. The Effect of Structure on pK a. An Introduction
to Delocalized Electrons and Resonance. The Effect of pH on the Structure
of an Organic Compound. Lewis Acids and Bases.
2. An Introduction to Organic Compounds:
Nomenclature, Physical Properties, and Representation of Structure.
Nomenclature of Alkyl Substituents. Nomenclature of Alkanes. Nomenclature
of Cycloalkanes. Nomenclature of Alkyl Halides. Nomenclature of Ethers.
Nomenclature of Alcohols. Nomenclature of Amines. Structures of Alkyl Halides,
Alcohols, Ethers, and Amines. Physical Properties of Alkanes, Alkyl Halides,
Alcohols, Ethers, and Amines. Conformations of Alkanes: Rotation About Carbon-Carbon
Bonds. Cycloalkanes: Ring Strain. Conformations of Cyclohexane. Conformations
of Monosubstituted Cyclohexanes. Conformations of Disubstituted Cyclohexanes.
Conformations of Fused Rings.
II. HYDROCARBONS, STEREOCHEMISTRY, AND RESONANCE.
3. Alkenes: Structure, Nomenclature, and an Introduction to Reactivity—Thermodynamics
and Kinetics.
Molecular Formula and the Degree of Unsaturation.
Nomenclature of Alkenes. The Structure of Alkenes. Cis- Trans Isomerism. The
E,Z System of Nomenclature. How Alkenes React. Curved Arrows. Thermodynamics
and Kinetics.
4. Reactions of Alkenes.
Addition of Hydrogen Halides. Carbocation
Stability. The Structure of the Transition State. Regioselectivity of Electophilic
Addition Reactions. Addition of Water and Addition of Alcohols. Rearrangement
of Carbocations. Addition of Halogens. Oxymercuration-Reduction and Alkoxymercuration-Reduction.
Addition of Borane: Hydroboration-Oxidation. Addition of Radicals. The
Relative Stabilities of Radicals. Addition of Hydrogen. The Relative Stabilities
of Alkenes. Reactions and Synthesis.
5. Stereochemistry: The Arrangement of Atoms in Space; The Stereochemistry
of Addition Reactions.
Cis-Trans Isomers. Chirality. Asymmetric
Carbon, Chirality Centers, and Stereocenters. Isomers with One Asymmetric
Carbon. Drawing Enantiomers. Naming Enantiomers: The R, S System
of Nomenclature. Optical Activity. Optical Purity and Enantiomeric Excess.
Isomers with More Than One Asymmetric Carbon. Meso Compounds. The R,
S System of Nomenclature for Isomers with More Than One Asymmetric
Carbon. Reactions of Compounds that Contain an Asymmetric Carbon. The Absolute
Configuration of (+)- Glyceraldehyde. Separating Enantiomers. Discrimination
of Enantiomers by Biological Molecules. Enantiotopic Hydrogens, Diastereotopic
Hydrogens, and Prochiral Carbons. Nitrogen and Phosphorus Asymmetric Carbons.
Stereochemistry of Reactions: Regioselective, Stereoselective, and Stereospecific
Reactions. Stereochemistry of Electrophilic Addition Reactions of Alkenes.
Stereochemistry of Enzyme-Catalyzed Reactions.
6. Reactions of Alkynes—Introduction to Multistep Synthesis.
Nomenclature of Alkynes. Physical Properties
of Unsaturated Hydrocarbons. The Structure of Alkynes. How Alkynes React.
Addition of Hydrogen Halides and Addition of Halogens. Addition of Water.
Addition of Borane: Hydroboration-Oxidation. Addition of Hydrogen. Acidity
of a Hydrogen Bonded to an SP Hybridized Carbon. Synthesis Using
Acetylide Ions. Designing a Synthesis I: An Introduction to Multistep Synthesis.
Commercial Use of Ethyne.
7. Electron Delocalization and Resonance—More About Molecular Orbital
Theory.
Delocalized Electrons: the Structure of
Benzene. The Bonding In Benzene. Resonance Contributors and the Resonance
Hybrid. Drawing Resonance Contributors. Predicted Stabilites of Resonance
Contributors. Resonance Energy. Stability of Allylic and Benzylic Cations.
Stability of Allylic and Benzylic Radicals. Some Chemical Consequences
of Electron Delocalization. The Effect of Electron Delocalization on pK
a. A Molecular Orbital Description of Stability.
8. Reactions of Dienes—Ultraviolet/Visible Spectroscopy.
Nomenclature of Alkenes with More than
One Functional Group. Configurational Isomers of Dienes. Relative Stabilities
of Dienes. How Dienes React. Electrophilic Addition Reactions of Isolated
Dienes. Electrophilic Addition Reactions of Conjugated Dienes. Thermodynamic
Versus Kinetic Control of Reactions. The Diels-Alder Reaction: A 1,4-Addition
Reaction. Ultraviolet and Visible Spectroscopy. The Beer-Lambert Law. Effect
of Conjugation on Imax. The Visible Spectrum and Color. Uses of UV/VIS
Spectroscopy.
III. SUBSTITUTION AND ELIMINATION REACTIONS.
9. Reactions of Alkanes: Radicals.
The Low Reactivity of Alkanes. Chlorination
and Bromination of Alkanes. Factors that Determine Product Distribution.
The Reactivity-Selectivity Principle. Radical Substitution of Benzylic
and Allylic Hydrogens. Stereochemistry of Radical Substitution Reactions.
Reactions of Cyclic Compounds. Radicals Reactions in Biological Systems.
Radicals and Stratospheric Ozone.
10. Substitution Reactions of Alkyl Halides.
Reactivity Considerations. The Mechanism
of SN2 Reactions. The SN2 Reaction. The Reversibility
of an SN2 Reaction. The Mechanism of SN1 Reaction.
The SN1 Reaction. The Stereochemistry of SN2 and
SN1 Reactions. Benzylic Halides, Allylic Halides, Vinylic Halides,
and Aryl Halides. Competition Between SN2 and SN1
Reactions. The Role of the Solvent in SN1 and SN1
Reactions. Biological Methylating Reagents.
11. Elimination Reactions of Alkyl Halides; Competition Between Substitution
and Elimination.
The E2 Reaction. The Regioselectivity
of the E2 Reaction. The E1 Reaction. Competition Between E2 and E1 Reactions.
Stereochemistry of E2 and E1 Reactions. Elimination from Cyclic Compounds.
A Kinetic Isotope Effect. Competition Between Substitution and Elimination.
Substitution and Elimination Reactions in Synthesis. Consecutive E2 Elimination
Reactions. Intermolecular versus Intramolecular Reactions. Designing a
Synthesis II: Approaching the Problem.
IV. IDENTIFICATION OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS.
12. Reactions of Alcohols, Ethers, Epoxides, and Sulfur-Containing Compounds—Organometallic
Compounds.
Substitution Reactions of Alcohol. Amines
Do Not Undergo Substitution Reactions. Other Methods Used to Convert Alcohols
Into Alkyl Halides. Converting Alcohols into Sulfonates. Dehydration of
Alcohols. Substitution Reactions of Ethers. Reactions of Epoxides. Arene
Oxides. Crown Ethers. Thiols, Sulfides, and Sulfonium Salts. Organometallic
Compounds. Coupling Reactions.
13. Mass Spectrometry and Infrared Spectroscopy.
Mass Spectrometry. The Mass Spectrum.
Fragmentation. Isotopes in Mass Spectrometry. Determination of Molecular
Formulas: High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry. Fragmentation at Functional
Groups. Spectroscopy and the Electromagnetic Spectrum. Infrared Spectroscopy.
Infrared Absorption Bands. Intensity of Absorption Bands. Position of Absorption
Bands. C-H Absorption Bands. Shape of Absorption Bands. Absence of Absorption
Bands. Infrared Inactive Vibrations. Identifying Infrared Spectra. Ultraviolet
and Visible Spectroscopy. The Beer-Lambert Law. Effect of Conjugation on
<F128>lmax. The Visible Spectrum and Color. Uses of UV/Vis Spectroscopy.
14. NMR Spectroscopy.
Introduction to NMR Spectroscopy. Fourier
Transform NMR. Shielding. The Number of Signals in the 1H NMR Spectrum.
The Chemical Shift. The Relative Position of 1H NMR Signals. Characteristic
Values of Chemical Shifts. Integration of the NMR Signals. Diamagnetic
Anisotropy. Splitting of the Signals. More Examples of 1H NMR Spectra.
Coupling Constants. Splitting Diagrams. Time Dependence of NMR Spectroscopy.
Protons Bonded to Oxygen and Nitrogen. Use of Deuterium in 1H NMR Spectroscopy.
Resolution of 1H NMR Spectra. 13C NMR Spectroscopy. DEPT 13C NMR Spectra.
Two-Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy. Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
V. AROMATIC COMPOUNDS.
15. Aromaticity—Reactions of Benzene.
Criteria for Aromaticity. Aromatic Hydrocarbons.
Aromatic Heterocyclic Compounds. Some Chemical Consequences of Aromaticity.
Antiaromaticity. A Molecular Orbital Description of Aromaticity and Antiaromaticity.
Nomenclature of Monosubstituted Benzenes. How Benzene Reacts. General Mechanism
for Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions. Halogenation of Benzene.
Nitration of Benzene. Sulfonation of Benzene. Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
of Benzene. Friedel-Crafts Alkylations of Benzene. Alkylations of Benzene
by Acylation-Reduction.
16. Reactions of Substituted Benzenes.
Nomenclature of Diubstituted and Polysubstituted
Benzenes. Reactions of Substituents on Benzene. The Effect of Substituents
on Reactivity. The Effect of Substituents on Orientation. The Effect of
Substituents on pK a. The Ortho/Para Ratio. Additional
Considerations Regarding Substituent Effects. Designing a Synthesis III:
Synthesis of Monosubstituted and Disubstituted Benzenes. Synthesis of Trisubstituted
Benzenes. Synthesis of Substituted Benzenes Using Arenediazonium Salts.
The Arenediazonium Ion as an Electrophile. Mechanism for the Reaction of
Amines with Nitrous Acid. Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions.
Benzyne. Polycyclic Benzenoid Hydrocarbons. Electrophilic Substitution
Reactions of Naphthalene and Substituted Naphthalenes.
VI. CARBONYL COMPOUNDS.
17. Carbonyl Compounds I: Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution.
Nomenclature. Structures of Carboxylic
Acids and Carboxylic Acid Derivatives. Physical Properties of Carbonyl
Compounds. Naturally Occurring Carboxylic Acids and Carobxylic Acid Derivatives.
How Class I Carbonyl Compounds React. Relative Reactivities of Carboxylic
Acids, Acyl Halides, and Carboxylic Acid Derivatives. General Mechanism
for Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution Reactions. Reactions of Acyl Halides.
Reactions of Acid Anhydrides. Reactions of Esters. Acid-Catalyzed Ester
Hydrolysis. Hydroxide-Ion-Promotes Ester Hydrolysis. Soaps, Detergents,
and Micelles. Reactions of Carboxylic Acids. Reactions of Amides. Acid-Catalyzed
Hydrolysis of Amides. Hydrolysis of an Imide- The Gabriel Synthesis. Hydrolysis
of Nitriles. Designing a Synthesis IV: The Synthesis of Cyclic Compounds.
Synthesis of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives. Dicarboxylic Acids and Their
Derivatives.
18. Carbonyl Compounds II: Nucleophilic Acyl Addition, Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution,
and Nucleophilic Addition-Elimination—Reactions of <F128>a, <F128>b-Unsaturated
Carbonyl Compounds.
Nomenclature. Relative Reactivities of
Carbonyl Compounds. How Aldeyhdes and Ketones React. Reactions of Carbonyl
Compounds with Carbon Nucleophiles. Reactions of Carbonyl Compounds with
Hydride Ion. Reactions of Aldehydes and Ketones with Nitrogen Nucleophiles.
Reactions of Aldehydes and Ketones with Oxygen Nucleophiles. Protecting
Groups. Addition of Sulfur Nucleophiles. The Wittig Reaction. Stereochemistry
of Nucleophilic Addition Reactions: Re and Si Faces. Designing
a Synthesis V: The Synthesis of Cyclic Compounds. Nucleophilic Addition
to -Unsaturated Aldehydes and Ketones: Direct Addition Versus Conjugate
Addition. Nucleophilic Addition to <F128>a, <F128>b-Unsaturated Carboxylic
Acid Derivatives. Enzyme-Catalyzed Additions to <F128>a, <F128>b-Unsaturated
Carbonyl Compounds.
19. Carbonyl Compounds III: Reactions at the <F128>a-Carbon.
Acidity of <F128>a-Hydrogens. Keto-Enol
Tautomerism. How Enols and Enolate Ions React. Halogenation of the <F128>a-Carbon
of Aldehydes and Ketones. Halogenation of the <F128>a-Carbon of Carboxylic
Acids: The Hell-Volhard-Zelinski Reaction. <F128>a-Halogenated Carbonyl
Compounds in Synthesis. Using LDA to Form an Enolate. Alkylation of the
<F128>a-Carbon of Carbonyl Compounds. Alkylation and Acylation of the
<F128>a-Carbon via an Enamine Intermediate. Alkylation of the <F128>b-Carbon:
The Michael Reaction. The Aldol Addition. Dehydration of Aldol Addition
Products: Formation of <F128>a, <F128>b-Unsaturated Aldehydes and
Ketones. The Mixed Aldol Addition. The Claisen Condensation. The Mixed
Claisen Condensation. Intramolecular Condensation and Addition Reactions.
Decarboxylation of 3-Oxocarboxylic Acids. The Malonic Ester Synthesis:
Synthesis of Carboxylic Acids. The Acetoacetic Ester Synthesis: Synthesis
of Methyl Ketones. Designing a Synthesis VI: Making New Carbon-Carbon Bonds.
Reactions at the <F128>a-Carbon in Biological Systems.
VII. BIOORGANIC COMPOUNDS.
20. More About Oxidation-Reduction Reactions.
Reduction Reactions. Oxidation of Alcohols.
Oxidation of Aldehydes and Ketones. Oxidation of Alkenes with Peroxyacids.
Hydroxylation of Alkenes. Oxidative Cleavage of 1,2-Diols. Oxidative Cleavage
of Alkenes: Ozonolysis. Oxidative Cleavage of Alkynes. Designing a Synthesis
VII: Functional Group Interconversion. Biological Oxidation-Reduction Reactions.
Oxidation of Hydroquinones/Reduction of Quinones.
21. More about Amines—Heterocyclic Compounds.
More About Nomenclature. More About Acid-Base
Properties. Amine Inversion. Synthesis of Amines. Reactions of Amines.
Reactions of Quaternary Ammonium Compounds. Phase-Transfer Catalysis. Unsaturated
Five-Membered-Ring Heterocycles. Unsaturated Six-Membered-Ring Heterocycles.
Biologically Important Heterocycles.
22. Carbohydrates.
Classification of Carbohydrates. The D
and L Notation. Configurations of the Aldoses. Configurations of the Ketoses.
Redox Reactions of Monosaccharides. Osazone Formation. Chain Elongation:
The Kiliani-Fischer Synthesis. Chain Shortening: The Ruff Degradation.
Stereochemistry of Glucose: The Fischer Proof. Cyclic Structure of Monosaccharides:
Hemiacetal Formation. Stability of Glucose. Acylation and Alkylation of
Monosaccharides. Formation of Glycosides. The Anomeric Effect. Reducing
and Nonreducing Sugars. Determination of Ring Size. Disaccharides. Polysaccharides.
Some Naturally Occurring Products Derived from Carbohydrates. Carbohydrates
on Cell Surfaces. Synthetic Sweeteners.
23. Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins.
Classification and Nomenclature of Amino
Acids. Configuration of Amino Acids. Acid-Base Properties of Amino Acids.
The Isoelectric Point. Separation of Amino Acids. Resolution of Racemic
Mixtures of Amino Acids. Peptide Bonds and Disulfide Bonds. Some Interesting
Peptides. Strategy of Peptide Bond Synthesis: N-Protection and C-Activation.
Automated Peptide Synthesis. Protein Structure. Determining the Primary
Structure of a Protein. Secondary Structure of Proteins. Tertiary Structure
of Proteins. Quaternary Structure of Proteins. Protein Denaturation.
24. Catalysis.
Catalysis in Organic Reactions. Nucleophilic
Catalysis. Acid Catalysis. Base Catalysis. Metal-Ion Catalysis. Intramolecular
Reactions. Intramolecular Catalysis. Catalysis in Biological Reactions.
Enzyme-Catalyzed Reactions. Catalytic Antibodies and Artificial Enzymes.
25. The Organic Mechanisms of the Coenzymes—Metabolism.
Overall View of Metabolism. Niacin: The
Vitamin Needed for Many Redox Reactions. Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide and
Flavin Mononucleotide: Vitamin B2. Thiamine Pyrophosphate: Vitamin
B1. Biotin: Vitamin H. Pyridoxal Phosphate: Vitamin B6.
Coenzyme B12: Vitamin B12. Tetrahydrofolate: Folic
Acid. Vitamin KH2: Vitamin K.
VIII: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY.
26. Lipids.
Fatty Acids. Waxes. Fats and Oils. Membranes.
Prostaglandins. Terpenes. Vitamin A. Biosynthesis of Terpenes. Steroids.
Biosynthesis of Cholesterol. Synthetic Steroids.
27. Nucleosides, Nucleotides, and Nucleic Acids I.
Nucleosides and Nucleotides. ATP: The
Carrier of Chemical Energy. Three Mechanisms for Phosphoryl Transfer Reactions.
The “High-Energy” Character of Phosphoanhydride Bonds.
Kinetic Stability of ATP in the Cell. Other Important Nucleotides. The
Nucleic Acids. Helical Forms of DNA. Biosynthesis of DNA: Replication.
Biosynthesis of Messenger RNA: Transcription. Ribosomal RNA. Transfer RNA.
Biosynthesis of Proteins: Translation. Why DNA Contains Thymine Instead
of Uracil. Determining the Base Sequence of DNA. Laboratory Synthesis of
DNA Strands. Rational Drug Design.
28. Synthetic Polymers.
General Classes of Synthetic Polymers.
Chain-Growth Polymers. Stereochemistry of Polymerization. Ziegler-Natta
Catalysts. Polymerization of Dienes. The Manufacture of Rubber. Copolymers.
Step-Growth Polymers. Physical Properties of Polymers. Biodegradable Polymers.
29. Pericyclic Reactions.
Three Kinds of Pericyclic Reactions. Molecular
Orbitals and Orbital Symmetry. Electrocyclic Reactions. Cycloaddition Reactions.
Sigmatropic Rearrangements. Pericyclic Reactions in Biological Systems.
Summary of the Selection Rules for Pericyclic Reactions.
30. The Organic Chemistry of Drugs: Discovery and Design.
Naming Drugs. Lead Compounds. Molecular
Modification. Random Screening. Serendipity in Drug Development. Receptors.
Drugs as Enzyme Inhibitors. Designing a Suicide Substrate. Quantitative
Structure-Activity Relation-ships (QSAR). Molecular Modeling. Combinatorial
Organic Synthesis. Antiviral Drugs. Economics of Drugs. Governmental Regulations.
Appendices.
Physical Properties of Organic Compounds.
Values. Derivations of Rate Laws. Summary of Methods Used to Synthesize
a Particular Functional Group. Summary of Methods Used to Form Carbon-Carbon
Bonds. Spectroscopy Tables.
Answers to Selected Problems.
Glossary.