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CHEM 125B - Freshman Organic Chemistry II

Lecture 27 - Triphenylmethyl and an Introduction to Carbonyl Chemistry. Painstaking studies of his "hexaphenylethane" and its reactivity convinced Gomberg that he had prepared the first trivalent carbon compound, triphenylmethyl radical, the discovery of which marked the emergence of fundamental organic chemistry in America. Isotopic labeling could decide whether protonated cyclopropane plays a role in Friedel-Crafts alkylation. C-13 NMR spectra of aldehydes and ketones show how characteristic chemical shifts are established empirically. The carbonyl group is thermodynamically stable but kinetically reactive. Its acid- and base-catalyzed reactions often involve loss of α-proton to form an enol or enolate intermediate. Carboxylic acids display four fundamentally different reaction patterns. Acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of acetals illustrates a multistep reaction mechanism involving the carbonyl group. (from oyc.yale.edu)

Lecture 27 - Triphenylmethyl and an Introduction to Carbonyl Chemistry

Time Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00] 1. Triphenylmethyl: Chemistry Comes to America
[00:15:39] 2. Protonated Cyclopropane in Friedel-Crafts Alkylation?
[00:22:05] 3. Carbonyl Compounds: Energy and Spectroscopy
[00:26:06] 4. Carbonyl Compounds: Reactivity Patterns

References
Lecture 27 - Triphenylmethyl and an Introduction to Carbonyl Chemistry
Instructor: Professor J. Michael McBride. Resources: Professor McBride's website resource for CHEM 125b (Spring 2011). Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov].

Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Mechanism: How Energies and Kinetic Order Influence Reaction Rates
Lecture 02 - Peculiar Rate Laws, Bond Dissociation Energies, and Relative Reactivities
Lecture 03 - Rate and Selectivity in Radical-Chain Reactions
Lecture 04 - Electronegativity, Bond Strength, Electrostatics, and Non-Bonded Interactions
Lecture 05 - Solvation, H-Bonding, and Ionophores
Lecture 06 - Bronsted Acidity and the Generality of Nucleophilic Substitution
Lecture 07 - Nucleophilic Substitution Tools - Stereochemistry, Rate Law, Substrate, Nucleophile, Leaving Group
Lecture 08 - Solvent, Leaving Group, Bridgehead Substitution, and Pentavalent Carbon
Lecture 09 - Pentavalent Carbon? E2, SN1, E1
Lecture 10 - Cation Intermediates - Alkenes: Formation, Addition, and Stability
Lecture 11 - Carbocations and the Mechanism of Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes and Alkynes
Lecture 12 - Nucleophilic Participation During Electrophilic Addition to Alkenes
Lecture 13 - Addition to Form Three-Membered Rings: Carbenoids and Epoxidation
Lecture 14 - Epoxide Opening, Dipolar Cycloaddition, and Ozonolysis
Lecture 15 - Metals and Catalysis in Alkene Oxidation, Hydrogenation, Metathesis, and Polymerization
Lecture 16 - Isoprenoids, Rubber, and Tuning Polymer Properties
Lecture 17 - Alkynes; Conjugation in Allylic Intermediates and Dienes
Lecture 18 - Linear and Cyclic Conjugation Theory; 4n+2 Aromaticity
Lecture 19 - Aromatic Transition States: Cycloaddition and Electrocyclic Reactions
Lecture 20 - Electronic and Vibrational Spectroscopy
Lecture 21 - Functional Groups and Fingerprints in IR Spectroscopy; Precession of Magnetic Nuclei
Lecture 22 - Medical MRI and Chemical NMR
Lecture 23 - Diamagnetic Anisotropy and Spin-Spin Splitting
Lecture 24 - Higher-Order Effects, Dynamics, and the NMR Time Scale
Lecture 25 - C-13 and 2D NMR - Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
Lecture 26 - Aromatic Substitution in Synthesis: Friedel-Crafts and Moses Gomberg
Lecture 27 - Triphenylmethyl and an Introduction to Carbonyl Chemistry
Lecture 28 - Mechanism and Equilibrium of Carbonyl Reactions
Lecture 29 - Imines and Enamines; Oxidation and Reduction
Lecture 30 - Oxidation States and Mechanisms
Lecture 31 - Periodate Cleavage, Retrosynthesis, and Green Chemistry
Lecture 32 - Measuring Bond Energies: Guest Lecture by Prof. G. Barney Ellison
Lecture 33 - Green Chemistry; Acids and Acid Derivatives
Lecture 34 - Acids and Acid Derivatives
Lecture 35 - Acyl Insertions and alpha-Reactivity
Lecture 36 - alpha-Reactivity and Condensation Reactions
Lecture 37 - Proving the Configuration of Glucose and Synthesizing Two Unnatural Products
Lecture 38 - Review: Synthesis of Cortisone