'Organic chemistry' is a specific discipline within
chemistry which involves the
scientific study of the structure, properties, composition,
reactions, and preparation (by
synthesis or by other means) of
chemical compounds consisting primarily of
carbon and
hydrogen, which may contain any number of other elements, including
nitrogen,
oxygen,
halogens as well as
phosphorus,
silicon and
sulfur.
[1] [2]
The original definition of "
organic" chemistry came from the misperception that organic compounds were always related to
life processes. Not all organic compounds support life on Earth, but life as we know it also depends heavily on
inorganic chemistry; for example, many
enzymes rely on
transition metals such as
iron and
copper; and materials such as shells, teeth and bones are part organic, part inorganic in composition. Apart from elemental carbon, inorganic chemistry deals only with simple carbon compounds, with molecular structures which do not contain carbon to carbon connections (its
oxides,
acids,
carbonates,
carbides, and
minerals). This does not mean that single-carbon organic compounds do not exist (viz.
methane and its simple derivatives).
Biochemistry mainly deals with the chemistry of
proteins (and other large
biomolecules).
Because of their unique properties, multi-carbon compounds exhibit extremely large variety and the range of application of organic compounds is enormous. They form the basis of, or are important constituents of many products (
paints,
plastics,
food,
explosives,
drugs,
petrochemicals, to name but a few) and (apart from a very few exceptions) they form the basis of all life processes.
The different shapes and chemical reactivities of organic molecules provide an astonishing variety of functions, like those of enzyme
catalysts in biochemical reactions of live systems. The autopropagating nature of these organic chemicals is what life is all about.
Trends in organic chemistry include
chiral synthesis,
green chemistry,
microwave chemistry,
fullerenes and
microwave spectroscopy.
Historical highlights
:''See also'':
History of chemistry
At the beginning of the nineteenth century chemists generally thought that compounds from living organisms were too complicated in structure to be capable of artificial
synthesis from non-living things, and that a 'vital force' or
vitalism conferred the characteristics of living beings on this form of matter. They named these compounds 'organic', and preferred to direct their investigations toward inorganic materials that seemed more promising.
Organic chemistry received a boost when it was realized that these compounds could be treated in ways similar to
inorganic compounds and could be created in the laboratory by means other than 'vital force'. Around 1816
Michel Chevreul started a study of
soaps made from various
fats and
alkali. He separated the different acids that, in combination with the alkali, produced the soap. Since these were all individual compounds, he demonstrated that it was possible to make a chemical change in various fats (which traditionally come from organic sources), producing new compounds, without 'vital force'. In
1828 Friedrich Wöhler first manufactured the organic chemical
urea (carbamide), a constituent of
urine, from the inorganic
ammonium cyanate NH
4OCN, in what is now called the
Wöhler synthesis. Although Wöhler was, at this time as well as afterwards, cautious about claiming that he had thereby destroyed the theory of vital force, most have looked to this event as the turning point.
A great next step was when in 1856
William Henry Perkin, while trying to manufacture
quinine, again accidentally came to manufacture the organic
dye now called
Perkin's mauve, which by generating a huge amount of money greatly increased interest in organic chemistry. Another step was the laboratory preparation of
DDT by Othmer Zeidler in 1874, but the
insecticide properties of this compound were not discovered until much later.
The crucial breakthrough for the theory of organic chemistry was the concept of chemical structure, developed independently and simultaneously by
Friedrich August Kekule and
Archibald Scott Couper in 1858. Both men suggested that
tetravalent carbon atoms could link to each other to form a carbon lattice, and that the detailed patterns of atomic bonding could be discerned by skillful interpretations of appropriate chemical reactions.
The history of organic chemistry continues with the discovery of
petroleum and its separation into
fractions according to boiling ranges. The conversion of different compound types or individual compounds by various chemical processes created the petroleum chemistry leading to the birth of the
petrochemical industry, which successfully manufactured artificial
rubbers, the various organic
adhesives, the property-modifying petroleum additives, and
plastics.
The
pharmaceutical industry began in the last decade of the 19th century when acetylsalicylic acid (more commonly referred to as
aspirin) manufacture was started in Germany by
Bayer.
Early examples of organic reactions and applications were
serendipitous, such as Perkin's accidental discovery of Perkin's mauve. However, from the 20th century, the progress of organic chemistry allowed for synthesis of specifically selected or even molecules designed with specific properties, as in
drug design. The process of finding new synthesis routes for a given compounds is called total synthesis.
Total synthesis of complex natural compounds started with
urea, increased in complexity to
glucose and
terpineol, and in 1907, total synthesis was commercialized the first time by
Gustaf Komppa with
camphor. Pharmaceutical benefits have been substantial, for example
cholesterol-related compounds have opened ways to synthesis of complex human hormones and their modified derivatives. Since the start of the 20th century, complexity of total syntheses has been increasing, with examples such as
lysergic acid and
vitamin B12. Today's targets feature tens of
stereogenic centers that must be synthesized correctly with
asymmetric synthesis.
Biochemistry, the chemistry of living organisms, their structure and interactions
in vitro and inside living systems, has only started in the 20th century, opening up a brand new chapter of organic chemistry with enormous scope.
Classification of organic substances
Description and nomenclature
Classification is not possible without having a full description of the individual compounds.
In contrast with
inorganic chemistry, in which describing a
chemical compound can be achieved by simply enumerating the chemical symbols of the
elements present in the compound together with the number of these elements in the molecule, in organic chemistry the relative arrangement of the atoms within a molecule must be added for a full description.
One way of describing the molecule is by drawing its
structural formula. Because of molecular complexity, simplified systems of chemical notation have been developed. The latest version is the
line-angle formula, which achieves simplicity without introducing ambiguity. In this system, the endpoints and intersections of each line represent one carbon, and hydrogens can either be notated or assumed to be present by implication. Some disadvantages of chemical notation are that they are not easily described by words and they are not easily printable. These problems have been addressed by describing molecular structures using
organic nomenclature .
Because of the difficulties arising from the very large number and variety of organic compounds, chemists realized early on that the establishment of an internationally accepted system of naming organic compounds was of paramount importance. The Geneva Nomenclature was born in 1892 as a result of a number of international meetings on the subject.
It was also realized that as the family of organic compounds grew, the system would have to be expanded and modified. This task was ultimately taken on by the International Union on Pure and Applied Chemistry (
IUPAC). Recognizing the fact that in the branch of biochemistry the complexity of organic structures increases, the IUPAC organization joined forces with the
International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, IUBMB, to produce a list of joint recommendations on nomenclature.
Later, as the numbers and complexities of organic molecules grew, new recommendations were made within IUPAC for simplification. The first such recommendation was presented in 1951 when a cyclic benzene structure was named a
cyclophane. Later recommendations extended the method to the simplification of other complex cyclic structures, including heterocyclics, and named such structures ''
phanes''.
For ordinary communication, to spare a tedious description, the official IUPAC naming recommendations are not always followed in practice except when it is necessary to give a concise definition to a compound, or when the IUPAC name is simpler (viz. ''ethanol'' versus ''ethyl alcohol''). Otherwise the ''common'' or
trivial name may be used, often derived from the source of the compound.
In summary, organic substances are classified by their molecular structural arrangement and by what other atoms are present along with the chief (carbon) constituent in their makeup, whilst in a structural formula, hydrogen is implicitly assumed to occupy all free valences of an appropriate carbon atom which remain after accounting for branching, other element(s) and/or multiple bonding.
Hydrocarbons and functional groups
Classification normally starts with the
hydrocarbons: compounds which contain only carbon and hydrogen. For sub-classes see below. Other elements present themselves in atomic configurations called
functional groups which have decisive influence on the chemical and physical characteristics of the compound; thus those containing the same atomic formations have similar characteristics, which may be:
miscibility with water,
acidity/
alkalinity, chemical
reactivity,
oxidation resistance, and others. Some functional groups are also
radicals, similar to those in inorganic chemistry, defined as ''
polar'' atomic configurations which pass during chemical reactions from one chemical compound into another without change.
Some of the elements of the functional groups (O, S, N,
halogens) may stand alone and the ''group'' name is not strictly appropriate, but because of their decisive effect on the way they modify the characteristics of the hydrocarbons in which they are present they are classed with the functional groups, and their specific effect on the properties lends excellent means for characterisation and classification.
Referring to the hydrocarbon types below, many, if not all of the
functional groups which are typically present within
aliphatic compounds are also represented within the
aromatic and
alicyclic group of compounds, unless they are dehydrated, which would lead to non-reacting co-optional groups.
Reference is made here again to the
organic nomenclature, which shows an extensive (if not comprehensive) number of classes of compounds according to the presence of various functional groups, based on the
IUPAC recommendations, but also some based on
trivial names. Putting compounds in sub-classes becomes more difficult when more than one functional group is present.
Two overarching chain type categories exist: Open Chain
aliphatic compounds and Closed Chain
cyclic compounds. Those in which both open chain and cyclic parts are present are normally classed with the latter.
Aliphatic compounds
The aliphatic hydrocarbons are subdivided into three groups,
homologous series according to their state of
saturation: paraffins
alkanes without any double or triple bonds, olefins
alkenes with double bonds, which can be mono-olefins with a single double bond, di-olefins, or di-enes with two, or poly-olefins with more. The third group with a triple bond is named after the name of the shortest member of the homologue series as the acetylenes
alkynes. The rest of the group is classed according to the functional groups present.
From another aspect aliphatics can be straight chain or branched chain compounds, and the degree of branching also affects characteristics, like
octane number or
cetane number in petroleum chemistry.
Aromatic and alicyclic compounds

Benzene is one of the best-known aromatic compounds
Cyclic compounds can, again, be saturated or unsaturated. Because of the bonding angle of carbon, the most stable configurations contain six carbon atoms, but while rings with five carbon atoms are also frequent, others are rarer. The cyclic hydrocarbons divide into
alicyclics and
aromatics (also called
arenes).
Of the
alicyclic compounds the
cycloalkanes do not contain multiple bonds, whilst the
cycloalkenes and the cycloalkynes do. Typically this latter type only exists in the form of large rings, called
macrocycles. The simplest member of the cycloalkane family is the three-membered
cyclopropane.
Aromatic hydrocarbons contain
conjugated double bonds. One of the simplest examples of these is
benzene, the structure of which was formulated by
Kekulé who first proposed the
delocalization or
resonance principle for explaining its structure. For "conventional" cyclic compounds,
aromaticity is conferred by the presence of 4n + 2 delocalized pi electrons, where n is an integer. Particular instability (antiaromaticity) is conferred by the presence of 4n conjugated pi electrons.
The characteristics of the cyclic hydrocarbons are again altered if heteroatoms are present, which can exist as either substituents attached externally to the ring (exocyclic) or as a member of the ring itself (endocyclic). In the case of the latter, the ring is termed a
heterocycle.
Pyridine and
furan are examples of aromatic heterocycles while
piperidine and
tetrahydrofuran are the corresponding alicyclic heterocycles. The heteroatom of heterocyclic molecules is generally oxygen, sulfur, or nitrogen, with the latter being particularly common in biochemical systems.
Rings can fuse with other rings on an edge to give
polycyclic compounds. The
purine nucleoside bases are notable polycyclic aromatic heterocycles. Rings can also fuse on a "corner" such that one atom (almost always carbon) has two bonds going to one ring and two to another. Such compounds are termed
spiro and are important in a number of
natural products.
Polymers

This swimming board is made of
polystyrene, an example of a polymer
One important property of carbon in organic chemistry is that it can form certain compounds, the individual molecules of which are capable of attaching themselves to one another, thereby forming a chain or a network. The process is called
polymerization and the chains or networks
polymers, while the source compound is a
monomer. Two main groups of polymers exist: those artificially manufactured are referred to as
industrial polymers [3]
or synthetic polymers and those naturally occurring as
biopolymers.
Since the invention of the first artificial polymer,
bakelite, the family has quickly grown with the invention of others. Common synthetic organic polymers are
polyethylene or polythene,
polypropylene,
nylon,
teflon or PTFE,
polystyrene,
polyesters,
polymethylmethacrylate (commonly known as perspex or plexiglas)
polyvinylchloride or PVC, and
polyisobutylene important artificial or synthetic
rubber also the polymerised
butadiene, a rubber component.
The examples are generic terms, and many varieties of each of these may exist, with their physical characteristics fine tuned for a specific use. Changing the conditions of polymerisation changes the chemical composition of the product by altering
chain length, or
branching, or the
tacticity. With a single monomer as a start the product is a
homopolymer. Further, secondary component(s) may be added to create a
heteropolymer (co-polymer) and the degree of clustering of the different components can also be controlled. Physical characteristics, such as hardness,
density, mechanical or
tensile strength, abrasion resistance, heat resistance, transparency, colour, etc. will depend on the final composition.
Biomolecules
Biomolecular chemistry is a major category within organic chemistry. Many complex multi-functional group molecules are important in living organisms. Some are long-chain
biopolymers, and these include
proteins,
DNA,
RNA and the
polysaccharides such as
starches in animals and
celluloses in plants. The other main classes are
amino acids (monomer building blocks of proteins),
carbohydrates (which includes the polysaccharides), the
nucleic acids (which include DNA and RNA as polymers), and the
lipids. In addition, animal biochemisty contains many small molecule intermediates which assist in energy production through the
Krebs cycle, and produces
isoprene, the most common hydrocarbon in animals. Isoprenes in animals form the important
steroid structural (
cholesterol) and steroid hormone compounds; and in plants form
terpenes,
terpenoids, some
alkaloids, and a unique set of structural hydrocarbons called biopolymer polyisoprenoids present in
latex sap which is the basis for making
rubber.
Others
Organic compounds containing bonds of carbon to nitrogen, oxygen and the halogens are not normally grouped separately. Others are sometimes put into major groups within organic chemistry and discussed under titles such as
organosulfur chemistry,
organometallic chemistry,
organophosphorus chemistry and
organosilicon chemistry.
Characteristics of organic substances

The structure of
methane by pictorial representation of a
Lewis diagram showing the sharing of electronpairs between atomic nuclei in a covalent bond. Please do not form the impression from the diagram that the real picture is two-dimensional, because this is not the case.
Organic compounds are generally
covalently bonded. This allows for unique structures such as long carbon chains and rings. The reason carbon is excellent at forming unique structures and that there are so many carbon compounds is that carbon atoms form very stable covalent bonds with one another (
catenation). In contrast to inorganic materials, organic compounds typically melt, boil, sublimate, or decompose below 300 °C. Neutral organic compounds tend to be less
soluble in
water compared to many inorganic
salts, with the exception of certain compounds such as ionic organic compounds and low
molecular weight alcohols and
carboxylic acids where
hydrogen bonding occurs.
Organic compounds tend to dissolve in organic
solvents which are either pure substances like
ether or
ethyl alcohol, or mixtures, such as the paraffinic solvents such as the various
petroleum ethers and
white spirits, or the range of pure or mixed aromatic solvents obtained from petroleum or tar
fractions by physical separation or by chemical conversion. Solubility in the different solvents depends upon the solvent type and on the
functional groups if present. Solutions are studied by the science of
physical chemistry. Like inorganic salts, organic compounds may also form
crystals. A unique property of carbon in
organic compounds is that its valency does not always have to be taken up by atoms of other elements, and when it is not, a condition termed
unsaturation results. In such cases we talk about carbon carbon
double bonds or
triple bonds. Double bonds alternating with single in a chain are called
conjugated double bonds. An
aromatic structure is a special case in which the conjugated chain is a closed ring.
Molecular structure elucidation
Organic compounds consist of carbon atoms, hydrogen atoms, and
functional groups. The
valence of carbon is 4, and hydrogen is 1, functional groups are generally 1. From the number of carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms in a molecule the
degree of unsaturation can be obtained. Many, but not all structures can be envisioned by the simple valence rule that there will be one bond for each valence number. The knowledge of the
chemical formula for an organic compound is not sufficient information because many
isomers can exist.
Organic compounds often exist as
mixtures. Because many organic compounds have relatively low
boiling points and/or dissolve easily in organic
solvents there exist many methods for separating mixtures into pure constituents that are specific to organic chemistry such as
distillation,
crystallization and
chromatography techniques.
There exist several methods for deducing the structure an organic compound. In general usage are (in alphabetical order):
★
Crystallography: This is the most precise method for determining
molecular geometry; however, it is very difficult to grow crystals of sufficient size and high quality to get a clear picture, so it remains a secondary form of analysis. Crystallography has seen especially extensive use in biochemistry (for protein structure determination) and in the characterization of organometallic catalysts, which often possess significant
symmetry.
★
Elemental analysis: A destructive method used to determine the elemental composition of a molecule. See also mass spectrometry, below.
★
Infrared spectroscopy: Chiefly used to determine the presence (or absence) of certain
functional groups.
★
Mass spectrometry: Used to determine the
molecular weight of a compound and from the fragmentation pattern its structure. High resolution mass spectrometry can often identify the precise formula of a compound through knowledge of isotopic masses and abundances; it is thus sometimes used in lieu of elemental analysis.
★
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometry identifies different nuclei based on their chemical environment. This is the most important and commonly used spectroscopic technique for organic chemists, often permitting complete assignment of atom connectivity and even stereochemistry given the proper set of spectroscopy experiments (e.g.
correlation spectroscopy).
★
Optical rotation: Distinguishes between two
enantiomers of a chiral compound based on the sign of rotation of plane polarized light. If the
specific rotation of an enantiomer is known, the magnitude of rotation also gives the ratio of enantiomers in a mixed sample, though
HPLC with a chiral column also can supply this information.
★
UV/VIS spectroscopy: Used to determine degree of conjugation in the system. While still sometimes used to characterize molecules, UV/VIS is more commonly used to quantitate how much of a known compound is present in a (typically liquid) sample.
Additional methods are provided by
analytical chemistry.
Organic reactions
Organic reactions are
chemical reactions involving
organic compounds. While pure
hydrocarbons undergo certain limited classes of reactions, many more reactions which organic compounds undergo are largely determined by
functional groups. The general theory of these reactions involves careful analysis of such properties as the
electron affinity of key atoms,
bond strengths and
steric hindrance. These issues can determine the relative stability of short-lived
reactive intermediates, which usually directly determine the path of the reaction. An example of a common reaction is a
substitution reaction written as:
:Nu
− + C-X → C-Nu + X
−
where X is some
functional group and Nu is a
nucleophile.
There are many important aspects of a specific reaction. Whether it will occur spontaneously or not is determined by the
Gibbs free energy change of the reaction. The heat that is either produced or needed by the reaction is found from the total
enthalpy change. Other concerns include whether
side reactions occur from the same reaction conditions. Any side reactions which occur typically produce undesired compounds which may be anywhere from very easy or very difficult to separate from the desired compound.
See also
★
Important publications in organic chemistry
★
List of organic reactions
★
Functional Groups
References
1. Robert T. Morrison, Robert N. Boyd, and Robert K. Boyd, ''Organic Chemistry'', 6th edition (Benjamin Cummings, 1992, ISBN 0-13-643669-2) - this is "Morrison and Boyd", a classic textbook
2. Richard F. and Sally J. Daley, ''Organic Chemistry'', www.ochem4free.info, Online organic chemistry textbook.
3. "industrial polymers, chemistry of." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2006
External links
★
MIT OpenCourseWare: Organic Chemistry I
★
Organic Chemistry Lectures, Videos and Text
★
Journal of Organic Chemistry (
Table of Contents)
★
Organic Letters (
Table of Contents)
★
Synlett
★
Synthesis
★
Organic Chemistry Portal - Recent Abstracts and (Name)Reactions
★
Home of a full, online, peer-reviewed organic chemistry text.
★
Virtual Textbook of Organic Chemistry
★
Organic Chemistry Teaching kit
★
Organic World Wide - A collection of Links
★
Organic Families and Their Functional Groups
★
Roger Frost's Chemistry Teaching Tools - Organic Chemistry
★
Organic chemistry help
★
Chemical Freeware on http://www.acdlabs.com