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Organic Chemistry

Organic chemistry is a branch of chemistry that examines the structure, characteristics, and interactions of organic molecules that have covalent bonds with carbon.

  • Organic chemistry is a large field due to a critical feature of the element carbon known as carbon catenation. Carbon has a remarkable ability to make extremely stable bonds with other carbon atoms, allowing it to construct stable molecules with relatively complex structures. Catenation is an element’s ability to create bonds with atoms of the same type. As a result, this characteristic of carbon can be used to explain the complexity of organic chemistry.
  • More than a million carbon compounds are known due to their ability in creating covalent bonds. Many are hydrocarbons, which are made up of simply carbon and hydrogen. The majority of hydrocarbons are derived from petroleum.
  • Jöns Jakob Berzelius, a Swedish scientist, used the term “organic” in 1807 to describe chemicals produced by living organisms. Organic molecules were once thought to be impossible to manufacture artificially because they carried a mystical essence of life known as “vital force.”
  • Friedrich Wöhler synthesized the organic chemical urea from inorganic starting materials in 1828, demonstrating that a compound synthesized by living cells could be synthesized in the laboratory without the use of biological starting materials, thus contradicting a basic tenet of vitalism.
  • The synthesis of urea represented the beginning of a new era in organic chemistry, not only redefining the term organic but also rerouting organic chemistry into a wholly new scientific subject.
  • The modern definition of organic is carbon-containing substances, which is now the scientific manner of characterizing the term. However, organic compounds have remained important to every known lifeform over the years, as an abundance of organic molecules comprise all living species.
  • Organic compounds are the foundation of all life on Earth and account for the vast majority of known substances. The variety of organic compounds is structurally complex, and their range of uses is extensive because of the bonding patterns of carbon, which has a valence of four and formal single, double, and triple bonds as well as structures with delocalized electrons.
  • Organic chemistry studies carbon-containing molecules’ structure, characteristics, content, reactions, and production. Most organic molecules comprise carbon and hydrogen but can also contain nitrogen, oxygen, halogens, phosphorus, silicon, and sulfur.
  • Organic chemistry is significant because organic compounds are the majority of the vital biological molecules in living systems. Almost all common polymers are made from organic molecules.
  • They are the foundation or ingredients of many commercial items, including pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals, and agrichemicals, as well as products made from them, such as lubricants, solvents, plastics, fuels, and explosives.
  • Organometallic chemistry, which studies carbon-based molecules including metals, and bioorganic chemistry, which integrates organic chemistry with biochemistry, are two new disciplines of organic chemistry.
  • Organic chemistry methods are applied in pharmaceutical chemistry, natural product chemistry, and materials science. Organic chemists in industry work in both discovery chemistry (creating new chemicals) and process optimization (developing better synthetic methods for large-scale production).

Friedel-Crafts Reaction: Mechanism, Applications, Limitations

August 26, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Friedel-Crafts reaction

Friedel-Crafts reaction is an electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction. This well-known reaction was invented by two scientists, French Charles Friedel and American James Crafts. In the Friedel-Crafts reaction, the aromatic molecule … Read more

Diels-Alder Reaction: Mechanism, Conditions, Variations, Applications

August 28, 2023August 25, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Diels-Alder reaction

The Diels-Alder reaction is a pericyclic reaction between a conjugated diene (two double bonds) and a dienophile. This type of substituted alkene is known as a dienophile. This process produces a … Read more

Mannich Reaction: Definition, Mechanism, Application

August 25, 2023 by Jyoti Bashyal
Mannich reaction mechanism

The Mannich reaction is a fundamental and significant C-C bond formation process in organic synthesis. The Mannich reaction is an organic reaction that is used to create a β-amino carbonyl molecule … Read more

Perkin Condensation Reaction: Mechanism, Applications, Limitation

August 24, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Perkin Condensation Reaction

The Perkin condensation reaction, also known as the Perkin reaction, is an organic reaction used to produce, unsaturated aromatic acid via condensation of an aromatic aldehyde and an acid anhydride … Read more

Reimer- Tiemann Reaction: Mechanism, Applications, Limitations

August 24, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Reimer- Tiemann reaction

The Reimer- Tiemann reaction, named after scientists Karl Reimer and Ferdinand Tiemann, is a type of substitution reaction. The reaction is utilized for the ortho-formylation of C6H5OH (phenols). One of … Read more

Rosenmund Reaction: Mechanism, Applications, Limitations

August 23, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Rosenmund reaction

The Rosenmund reaction is a hydrogenation reaction that converts an acyl chloride to an aldehyde. To make an aldehyde from acyl chloride, the Rosenmund reduction procedure is employed. This hydrogenation procedure … Read more

Claisen Condensation Reaction: Mechanism, Applications

June 7, 2024August 23, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Claisen condensation reaction

The Claisen condensation reaction involves the formation of a  β-keto ester by the reaction of two molecules of esters with an α-hydrogen atom with a strong base like sodium ethoxide. Water … Read more

Cannizzaro Reaction: Mechanism, Scope, Applications

August 22, 2023 by Kabita Sharma
Cannizzaro reaction

Cannizzaro reaction is a chemical process in which an aldehyde without a hydrogen atom in the alpha position undergoes base-induced disproportionation.  Cannizzaro Reaction occurs when one molecule of aldehyde is … Read more

Swarts Reaction/Swarts Fluorination Reaction: Mechanism, Application

August 23, 2023August 22, 2023 by Jyoti Bashyal
Swarts ReactionSwarts Fluorination Reaction

Swarts Reaction is an organic reaction that converts alkyl chlorides/alkyl bromides to alkyl fluorides. Frederick Jean Edmond Swarts reported this method in 1892.This reaction is carried out by heating the … Read more

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