Organic Chemistry as a Second Language: First Semester Topics 5th Edition by David R. Klein, ISBN-13: 978-1119493488
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- Publisher: ? Wiley; 5th edition (September 11, 2019)
- Language: ? English
- 400 pages
- ISBN-10: ? 111949348X
- ISBN-13: ? 978-1119493488
Organic chemistry can be a challenging subject. Most students view organic chemistry as a subject requiring hours upon hours of memorization. Author David Klein’s Second Language books prove this is not true-organic chemistry is one continuous story that actually makes sense if you pay attention. Offering a unique skill-building approach, these market-leading books teach students how to ask the right questions to solve problems, study more efficiently to avoid wasting time, and learn to speak the language of organic chemistry.
Covering the initial half of the course, Organic Chemistry as a Second Language: First Semester Topics reviews critical principles and explains their relevance to the rest of the course. Each section provides hands-on exercises and step-by-step explanations to help students fully comprehend classroom lectures and textbook content. Now in its fifth edition, this valuable study resource covers the characteristics of molecules, the nature of atomic bonds, the relationships between different types of molecules, drawing and naming molecules, and essential molecular reactions.
Table of Contents:
COVER
INTRODUCTION
IS ORGANIC CHEMISTRY REALLY ALL ABOUT MEMORIZATION?
THE PLOT
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
HOW TO STUDY
CHAPTER 1: BOND-LINE DRAWINGS
1.1 HOW TO READ BOND-LINE DRAWINGS
1.2 HOW TO DRAW BOND-LINE DRAWINGS
1.3 MISTAKES TO AVOID
1.4 MORE EXERCISES
1.5 IDENTIFYING FORMAL CHARGES
1.6 FINDING LONE PAIRS THAT ARE NOT DRAWN
CHAPTER 2: RESONANCE
2.1 WHAT IS RESONANCE?
2.2 CURVED ARROWS: THE TOOLS FOR DRAWING RESONANCE STRUCTURES
2.3 THE TWO COMMANDMENTS
2.4 DRAWING GOOD ARROWS
2.5 FORMAL CHARGES IN RESONANCE STRUCTURES
2.6 DRAWING RESONANCE STRUCTURES—STEP BY STEP
2.7 DRAWING RESONANCE STRUCTURES—BY RECOGNIZING PATTERNS
2.8 ASSESSING THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF RESONANCE STRUCTURES
CHAPTER 3: ACID–BASE REACTIONS
3.1 FACTOR 1—WHAT ATOM IS THE CHARGE ON?
3.2 FACTOR 2—RESONANCE
3.3 FACTOR 3—INDUCTION
3.4 FACTOR 4—ORBITALS
3.5 RANKING THE FOUR FACTORS
3.6 OTHER FACTORS
3.7 QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT (pKa VALUES)
3.8 PREDICTING THE POSITION OF EQUILIBRIUM
3.9 SHOWING A MECHANISM
CHAPTER 4: GEOMETRY
4.1 ORBITALS AND HYBRIDIZATION STATES
4.2 GEOMETRY
4.3 LONE PAIRS
CHAPTER 5: NOMENCLATURE
5.1 FUNCTIONAL GROUP
5.2 UNSATURATION
5.3 NAMING THE PARENT CHAIN
5.4 NAMING SUBSTITUENTS
5.5 STEREOISOMERISM
5.6 NUMBERING
5.7 COMMON NAMES
5.8 GOING FROM A NAME TO A STRUCTURE
CHAPTER 6: CONFORMATIONS
6.1 HOW TO DRAW A NEWMAN PROJECTION
6.2 RANKING THE STABILITY OF NEWMAN PROJECTIONS
6.3 DRAWING CHAIR CONFORMATIONS
6.4 PLACING GROUPS ON THE CHAIR
6.5 RING FLIPPING
6.6 COMPARING THE STABILITY OF CHAIRS
6.7 DON’T BE CONFUSED BY THE NOMENCLATURE
CHAPTER 7: CONFIGURATIONS
7.1 LOCATING CHIRAL CENTERS
7.2 DETERMINING THE CONFIGURATION OF A CHIRAL CENTER
7.3 NOMENCLATURE
7.4 DRAWING ENANTIOMERS
7.5 DIASTEREOMERS
7.6 MESO COMPOUNDS
7.7 DRAWING FISCHER PROJECTIONS
7.8 OPTICAL ACTIVITY
CHAPTER 8: MECHANISMS
8.1 INTRODUCTION TO MECHANISMS
8.2 NUCLEOPHILES AND ELECTROPHILES
8.3 BASICITY VS. NUCLEOPHILICITY
8.4 ARROW-PUSHING PATTERNS FOR IONIC MECHANISMS
8.5 CARBOCATION REARRANGEMENTS
8.6 INFORMATION CONTAINED IN A MECHANISM
CHAPTER 9: SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS
9.1 THE MECHANISMS
9.2 FACTOR 1—THE ELECTROPHILE (SUBSTRATE)
9.3 FACTOR 2—THE NUCLEOPHILE
9.4 FACTOR 3—THE LEAVING GROUP
9.5 FACTOR 4—THE SOLVENT
9.6 USING ALL FOUR FACTORS
9.7 SUBSTITUTION REACTIONS TEACH US SOME IMPORTANT LESSONS
CHAPTER 10: ELIMINATION REACTIONS
10.1 THE E2 MECHANISM
10.2 THE REGIOCHEMICAL OUTCOME OF AN E2 REACTION
10.3 THE STEREOCHEMICAL OUTCOME OF AN E2 REACTION
10.4 THE E1 MECHANISM
10.5 THE REGIOCHEMICAL OUTCOME OF AN E1 REACTION
10.6 THE STEREOCHEMICAL OUTCOME OF AN E1 REACTION
10.7 SUBSTITUTION VS. ELIMINATION
10.8 DETERMINING THE FUNCTION OF THE REAGENT
10.9 IDENTIFYING THE MECHANISM(S)
10.10 PREDICTING THE PRODUCTS
CHAPTER 11: ADDITION REACTIONS
11.1 TERMINOLOGY DESCRIBING REGIOCHEMISTRY
11.2 TERMINOLOGY DESCRIBING STEREOCHEMISTRY
11.3 ADDING H AND H
11.4 ADDING H AND X, MARKOVNIKOV
11.5 ADDING H AND Br, ANTI-MARKOVNIKOV
11.6 ADDING H AND OH, MARKOVNIKOV
11.7 ADDING H AND OH, ANTI-MARKOVNIKOV
11.8 SYNTHESIS TECHNIQUES
11.9 ADDING Br AND Br; ADDING Br AND OH
11.10 ADDING OH AND OH, ANTI
11.11 ADDING OH AND OH, SYN
11.12 OXIDATIVE CLEAVAGE OF AN ALKENE
SUMMARY OF REACTIONS
CHAPTER 12: ALKYNES
12.1 STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF ALKYNES
12.2 PREPARATION OF ALKYNES
12.3 ALKYLATION OF TERMINAL ALKYNES
12.4 REDUCTION OF ALKYNES
12.5 HYDRATION OF ALKYNES
12.6 KETO-ENOL TAUTOMERIZATION
12.7 OZONOLYSIS OF ALKYNES
CHAPTER 13: ALCOHOLS
13.1 NAMING AND DESIGNATING ALCOHOLS
13.2 PREDICTING SOLUBILITY OF ALCOHOLS
13.3 PREDICTING RELATIVE ACIDITY OF ALCOHOLS
13.4 PREPARING ALCOHOLS: A REVIEW
13.5 PREPARING ALCOHOLS VIA REDUCTION
13.6 PREPARING ALCOHOLS VIA GRIGNARD REACTIONS
13.7 SUMMARY OF METHODS FOR PREPARING ALCOHOLS
13.8 REACTIONS OF ALCOHOLS: SUBSTITUTION AND ELIMINATION
13.9 REACTIONS OF ALCOHOLS: OXIDATION
13.10 CONVERTING AN ALCOHOL INTO AN ETHER
CHAPTER 14: ETHERS AND EPOXIDES
14.1 INTRODUCTION TO ETHERS
14.2 PREPARATION OF ETHERS
14.3 REACTIONS OF ETHERS
14.4 PREPARATION OF EPOXIDES
14.5 RING-OPENING REACTIONS OF EPOXIDES
CHAPTER 15: SYNTHESIS
15.1 ONE-STEP SYNTHESES
15.2 MULTISTEP SYNTHESES
15.3 RETROSYNTHETIC ANALYSIS
15.4 CREATING YOUR OWN PROBLEMS
DETAILED SOLUTIONS
INDEX
END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
David Klein is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry at The Johns Hopkins University where he has taught organic chemistry since 1999. Having worked with thousands of students, he has intense first-hand knowledge of how they learn and the difficulties they encounter. He received his bachelor’s degree in chemistry from The Johns Hopkins University and his PhD from the University of California at Los Angeles under the supervision of Professor Orville Chapman. Motivated by his experiences teaching organic chemistry as a graduate student at UCLA, David wrote Organic Chemistry as a Second Language (John Wiley & Sons, 2004, updated 2nd edition published in 2008), which has become a highly valued student study resource. David has received numerous teaching awards at both UCLA and Johns Hopkins for his unique, skill-building approach to organic chemistry instruction. David is married, with five children, and enjoys skiing, scuba-diving, and Tae Kwon Do.
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