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Carbonyl compounds preview

In the next five chapters, we ll discuss the chemistry of the carbonyl group, C=0 (pronounced car-bo-neel). Although there are many different kinds of carbonyl compounds and many different reactions, there are only a few fundamental principles that tie the entire field together. The purpose of this brief preview is not to show details of specific reactions but rather to provide a framework for learning carbonyl-group chemistry. Read through this preview now, and return to it on occasion to remind yourself of the larger picture. [Pg.686]

As we saw in A Preview of Carbonyl Compounds, the most general reaction of aldehydes and ketones is the nucleophilic addition reaction. A nucleophile, Nu-, approaches along the C=0 bond from an angle of about 75° to the plane of the carbonyl group and adds to the electrophilic C=0 carbon atom. At the same time, rehybridization of the carbonyl carbon from sp2 to sp3 occurs, an electron pair from the C=0 bond moves toward the electronegative oxygen atom, and a tetrahedral alkoxide ion intermediate is produced (Figure 19.1). [Pg.702]

As a general rule, nucleophilic addition reactions are characteristic only of aldehydes and ketones, not of carboxylic acid derivatives. The reason for the difference is structural. As discussed previously in A Preview of Carbonyl Compounds and shown in Figure 19.14, the tetrahedral intermediate produced by addition of a nucleophile to a carboxylic acid derivative can eliminate a leaving group, leading to a net nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction. The tetrahedral intermediate... [Pg.723]

We said in A Preview ofCnrbonyl Compounds that much of the chemistry of carbonyl compounds can be explained by just four fundamental reaction types nucleophilic additions, nucleophilic acyl substitutions, o substitutions, and carbonyl condensations. Having studied the first two of these reactions in the past three chapters, let s now look in more detail at the third major carbonyl-group process—the a-substitution reaction. [Pg.841]

The chemistry of all acid derivatives is similar and is dominated by single reaction—the nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction that saw briefly in A Preview of Carbonyl Compounds ... [Pg.844]


See other pages where Carbonyl compounds preview is mentioned: [Pg.686]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.741]    [Pg.686]    [Pg.743]    [Pg.752]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.763]    [Pg.772]    [Pg.702]    [Pg.743]    [Pg.752]    [Pg.1321]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.712]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.894 ]




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A Preview of Carbonyl Compounds

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