IB Chemistry · Unit 11 · Organic

Carbon,
with mechanism.

Reactions, mechanisms, and the spectroscopy that tells you what you've made. Organic chemistry, with the answers.

14Lessons
10HL extensions
42Key terms
SL+HLLevel
¹H NMR CHEMICAL SHIFT (ppm)
Unit 11 · Standard Level

4 lessons to work through.

The required syllabus content for Unit 11, in order. Each card is one lesson-sized checkpoint.

Lesson 1

Free-radical substitution

Alkanes are stable (strong C-C and C-H bonds)

Lesson 2

SL nucleophilic substitution and electrophilic addidion

Lesson 2 of Unit 11.

Lesson 6

Oxidation of alcohols

Reduction in this case can be explained in terms of gaining hydrogen

Lesson 7

Reduction of carbonyls and alkenes

Lesson 7 of Unit 11.

Lessons in detail

The unit, lesson by lesson.

Each lesson card below mirrors the original teacher deck — syllabus refs, content, worked examples and practice questions in order.

Lesson 1

Free-radical substitution

Reactivity 3.4.1

Lesson outcomes

Alkanes are usually unreactive — their C–C and C–H bonds are strong and non-polar. With halogens (Cl₂ or Br₂) under UV light, they undergo free-radical substitution: an H atom is replaced by a halogen.

The three-step mechanism (CH₄ + Cl₂ → CH₃Cl + HCl)

Initiation: UV light breaks the Cl–Cl bond homolytically (each atom takes one electron from the bond):

Cl₂ → 2 Cl•

Propagation: a radical attacks a stable molecule, forming a product and a new radical that continues the chain:

Cl• + CH₄ → HCl + •CH₃
•CH₃ + Cl₂ → CH₃Cl + Cl•

Termination: two radicals combine, ending the chain:

Cl• + Cl• → Cl₂   or   •CH₃ + Cl• → CH₃Cl   or   •CH₃ + •CH₃ → C₂H₆

Why a mixture forms

CH₃Cl still has C–H bonds, so it can undergo further substitution: CH₃Cl → CH₂Cl₂ → CHCl₃ → CCl₄. To favour mono-substitution, use a large excess of alkane.

Try these

  1. What is a free radical? What chemical notation indicates a radical?
    Show answer
    A species with an unpaired electron. Notation: a dot, e.g. Cl• (chlorine radical) or CH₃• (methyl radical). Radicals are highly reactive.
  2. Why doesn't free-radical substitution occur in the dark?
    Show answer
    Without UV light, the Cl–Cl bond doesn't break homolytically — no initiating radicals form. The reaction cannot start.
  3. Distinguish homolytic from heterolytic bond breaking.
    Show answer
    Homolytic: bond electrons split equally — each atom takes one electron, forming two radicals. Heterolytic: bond electrons go entirely to one atom, forming a cation and an anion (or in organic context, a positive carbocation and a negatively-charged leaving group).
  4. Write the three steps of the chlorination of methane (CH₄ + Cl₂ → CH₃Cl + HCl).
    Show answer
    Initiation: Cl₂ → 2 Cl• (UV). Propagation: Cl• + CH₄ → HCl + •CH₃; then •CH₃ + Cl₂ → CH₃Cl + Cl•. Termination: any two radicals combining, e.g. Cl• + Cl• → Cl₂; •CH₃ + Cl• → CH₃Cl; •CH₃ + •CH₃ → C₂H₆.
  5. Sketch the curly-arrow representation of an initiation step. What does the half-arrow mean?
    Show answer
    A 'fishhook' or half-arrow shows the movement of a single electron (vs a full arrow for an electron pair). Two fishhooks from the Cl–Cl bond go to each Cl atom, generating two radicals.
  6. Why is free-radical substitution a poor synthesis method despite being used industrially?
    Show answer
    Produces a mixture of products (mono-, di-, tri-, tetra-substituted, plus radical combination products like ethane). Hard to control which exact product forms. Yields a 'product mixture' that requires separation/purification, lowering atom economy and overall yield of the desired product.
Lesson 2

Introduction to nucleophilic substitution and electrophilic addition

Reactivity 3.4.2Reactivity 3.4.3

Lesson outcomes

Nucleophiles, electrophiles, leaving groups

Nucleophile ("nucleus-loving") — electron-rich species with a lone pair or negative charge that attacks an electron-poor centre. Common: OH⁻, CN⁻, NH₃, H₂O.

Electrophile ("electron-loving") — electron-poor species (positive charge or partial positive δ⁺) that attacks an electron-rich centre. Common: H⁺, Br⁺, NO₂⁺, carbonyl C.

Leaving group — atom or group that departs taking the bonding electrons. Good leaving groups are stable as anions: I⁻ > Br⁻ > Cl⁻ >> F⁻.

Nucleophilic substitution of halogenoalkanes

CH₃CH₂Br + OH⁻ → CH₃CH₂OH + Br⁻

The nucleophile (OH⁻) attacks the δ⁺ carbon; the halide departs as a leaving group.

Electrophilic addition to alkenes

The π bond is electron-rich and attacks an electrophile. Examples:

Markovnikov's rule

For HX adding to an unsymmetric alkene: H adds to the C with more H's already; X adds to the C with fewer. The major product has the halogen on the more substituted carbon.

Worked example

Markovnikov in action

Problem. Predict the major product when propene CH₃CH=CH₂ reacts with HBr.
Solution. The two possible products are 1-bromopropane (CH₃CH₂CH₂Br) and 2-bromopropane (CH₃CHBrCH₃).
Markovnikov: H to the C with more H's (CH₂ end), Br to the C with fewer (CH= end). Major product: 2-bromopropane CH₃CHBrCH₃.
Why? The mechanism proceeds via a carbocation; the more substituted secondary cation (CH₃-CH⁺-CH₃) is more stable than the primary one.

Try these

  1. Define nucleophile, electrophile and leaving group.
    Show answer
    Nucleophile: electron-rich species with lone pair or − charge, attacks an electron-poor centre (e.g. OH⁻, NH₃, H₂O). Electrophile: electron-poor species with + charge or δ⁺, attacks an electron-rich centre (e.g. H⁺, Br⁺, NO₂⁺). Leaving group: atom or group that departs taking the bonding electrons with it (e.g. Br⁻ in halogenoalkane substitution).
  2. Write the equation for the reaction of bromoethane with OH⁻. Identify the nucleophile and the leaving group.
    Show answer
    CH₃CH₂Br + OH⁻ → CH₃CH₂OH + Br⁻. Nucleophile = OH⁻. Leaving group = Br⁻.
  3. State Markovnikov's rule for electrophilic addition.
    Show answer
    When HX adds to an unsymmetric alkene, the H attaches to the C that already has more H atoms, and X to the C with fewer. Reason: the more substituted (secondary or tertiary) carbocation intermediate is more stable.
  4. Predict the major product of CH₃CH=CH₂ + HBr.
    Show answer
    Markovnikov rule: H to C with more H (the terminal CH₂); Br to C with fewer H (the middle CH=). Major product: 2-bromopropane (CH₃CHBrCH₃) rather than 1-bromopropane.
  5. Bromine water is added to a colourless gas. The orange colour disappears. Is the gas an alkane or an alkene? Explain.
    Show answer
    An alkene. Br₂ undergoes electrophilic addition to a C=C double bond, forming a colourless dibromoalkane. Alkanes don't react with Br₂(aq) at room temperature.
  6. What is the test for a C=C double bond using KMnO₄?
    Show answer
    Add purple, dilute, slightly alkaline KMnO₄(aq) to the substance. If a C=C is present, KMnO₄ adds across the double bond forming a diol — the colour changes from purple to colourless (or brown precipitate of MnO₂). Alkanes show no change.
Lesson 6

Oxidation of alcohols

Reactivity 3.4.4

Lesson outcomes

Primary alcohol: –OH on C bonded to ≤1 other C. Secondary: –OH on C bonded to 2 other C. Tertiary: –OH on C bonded to 3 other C.

Reagent

Acidified potassium dichromate K₂Cr₂O₇ / H₂SO₄ — Cr is reduced from +6 (orange Cr₂O₇²⁻) to +3 (green Cr³⁺), confirming oxidation has occurred. Acidified KMnO₄ also works (purple → colourless).

Primary alcohol — two stages

CH₃CH₂OH → CH₃CHO (ethanal) → CH₃COOH (ethanoic acid).

To stop at the aldehyde: use distillation — the aldehyde has a lower b.p. and distils off before further oxidation. To go all the way to the acid: reflux — keep everything in the flask until oxidation is complete.

Secondary alcohol — one stage

Propan-2-ol → propanone (a ketone). No further oxidation possible without breaking C–C bonds.

Tertiary alcohol — no reaction

The OH carbon has no H to lose, so dichromate cannot oxidise it. Stays orange.

Try these

  1. Classify each as primary, secondary, or tertiary: (a) ethanol, (b) propan-2-ol, (c) 2-methylpropan-2-ol.
    Show answer
    (a) Primary (CH₃CH₂OH — the OH carbon is bonded to one other C). (b) Secondary (CH₃CHOHCH₃ — OH carbon bonded to two C). (c) Tertiary ((CH₃)₃COH — OH carbon bonded to three C, no H on that C).
  2. What products do you get when you oxidise (a) a primary alcohol with distillation, (b) a primary alcohol with reflux, (c) a secondary alcohol, (d) a tertiary alcohol?
    Show answer
    (a) Aldehyde (distil to remove before further oxidation). (b) Carboxylic acid (excess oxidising agent + heat all the way). (c) Ketone (no further oxidation possible). (d) No reaction (no H on the OH carbon to remove).
  3. Distinguish propan-2-ol from 2-methylpropan-2-ol using acidified K₂Cr₂O₇.
    Show answer
    Propan-2-ol (secondary): the dichromate turns from orange to green (oxidised to propanone). 2-methylpropan-2-ol (tertiary): no reaction; dichromate stays orange.
  4. An organic compound has formula C₄H₁₀O. It is oxidised by hot acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ to a substance that is acidic. Suggest its structure and name.
    Show answer
    Oxidation to an acid indicates a primary alcohol. C₄H₁₀O primary alcohols: butan-1-ol (CH₃CH₂CH₂CH₂OH) → butanoic acid. (Or 2-methylpropan-1-ol → 2-methylpropanoic acid.)
  5. Why must you distil (not reflux) ethanol with acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ to make ethanal?
    Show answer
    Reflux keeps everything in the flask — ethanal would continue to be oxidised to ethanoic acid. Distillation removes ethanal (b.p. 21 °C, lower than ethanol's 78 °C) as soon as it forms, before further oxidation.
Lesson 7

Reduction of carbonyls and alkenes

Reactivity 3.4.4

Lesson outcomes

Reduction increases the H content (or decreases O content). Each oxidation is reversible by an appropriate reduction:

ReductionReagentProduct
Aldehyde → 1° alcoholNaBH₄ or LiAlH₄RCH₂OH
Ketone → 2° alcoholNaBH₄ or LiAlH₄R₂CHOH
Carboxylic acid → 1° alcoholLiAlH₄ (NaBH₄ won't)RCH₂OH
Alkene → alkaneH₂ + Ni catalystSaturated hydrocarbon

Hydrogenation in industry

Vegetable oils contain unsaturated fatty acids. Partial hydrogenation with H₂/Ni converts C=C bonds to C–C, raising the m.p. and producing a solid (margarine). However, partial hydrogenation can produce trans fats — now known to be harmful.

Try these

  1. Compare the action of NaBH₄ vs LiAlH₄. Which is more reactive?
    Show answer
    NaBH₄ (sodium borohydride): milder, safer. Reduces aldehydes and ketones to alcohols. Does not reduce carboxylic acids or esters. LiAlH₄ (lithium aluminium hydride): stronger reducing agent. Reduces aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters and amides — all to alcohols (or amines for amides). Reacts violently with water — must use anhydrous conditions.
  2. Predict the product when (a) propanal is reduced with NaBH₄, (b) propanone is reduced with NaBH₄, (c) ethanoic acid is reduced with LiAlH₄.
    Show answer
    (a) Propan-1-ol (primary alcohol). (b) Propan-2-ol (secondary alcohol). (c) Ethanol (primary alcohol — LiAlH₄ takes acid all the way back to primary alcohol).
  3. How are unsaturated vegetable oils converted into margarine?
    Show answer
    Hydrogenation: H₂ added across the C=C double bonds in the unsaturated fatty acid chains, catalysed by Ni at ~150 °C. Each C=C reduces to C–C. Result: a saturated fat with higher m.p. — solid at room T.
  4. Show, with equations, how to convert ethene to ethanoic acid in three steps.
    Show answer
    (1) Ethene + H₂O (H₃PO₄, 300 °C) → ethanol CH₃CH₂OH (acid-catalysed hydration). (2) Ethanol + acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ (reflux) → ethanoic acid CH₃COOH (oxidation, all the way through). [Step 2 takes the alcohol straight to the acid.]
  5. Why are 'trans fats' (produced by partial hydrogenation) now considered unhealthy?
    Show answer
    Partial hydrogenation can isomerise some C=C bonds from cis (kinked, healthy) to trans (straight, like saturated fats). Trans fats raise LDL cholesterol and increase cardiovascular disease risk. Most countries now restrict or ban trans fats in food.
HL extension

The four
spectra of
identification.

HL: ¹H NMR, IR, mass spectrometry, and the combined-spectra problem that's a syllabus favourite.

Lesson 3 HL only

S_N1 and S_N2 mechanisms

Reactivity 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Distinguish SN1 (two-step, carbocation intermediate) and SN2 (one-step, concerted).
  • Predict which mechanism is favoured based on substrate (1°, 2°, 3°) and solvent.
  • Recognise the stereochemical consequences (SN2 inverts; SN1 racemises).

SN2 · Substitution Nucleophilic Bimolecular

  • Single concerted step — bond-making and bond-breaking happen simultaneously.
  • Nucleophile attacks from the opposite side of the leaving group.
  • Stereochemistry inverts ("Walden inversion") — like an umbrella turning inside out.
  • Rate = k [RX][Nu⁻] — both reactants in the rate law.
  • Favoured by primary halogenoalkanes (least steric hindrance to backside attack).

SN1 · Substitution Nucleophilic Unimolecular

  • Two steps. Step 1 (slow): leaving group departs, forming a planar carbocation. Step 2 (fast): nucleophile attacks the cation.
  • Carbocation is planar → attack from either face → racemic product from a chiral starting material.
  • Rate = k [RX] — only the substrate appears (the nucleophile attacks after the RDS).
  • Favoured by tertiary halogenoalkanes (most stable carbocation) and polar protic solvents.

Predicting which mechanism dominates

FactorFavours SN1Favours SN2
Substrate3° > 2°1° > 2°
NucleophileWeak (e.g. H₂O)Strong (e.g. OH⁻, CN⁻)
SolventPolar protic (H₂O, ROH)Polar aprotic (acetone, DMSO)
Leaving groupI > Br > ClI > Br > Cl

Try these

  1. Distinguish SN1 from SN2 mechanisms in three ways.
    Show answer
    Steps: SN1 is two-step (slow ionisation → fast nucleophilic attack); SN2 is one concerted step. Rate law: SN1 rate = k[RX]; SN2 rate = k[RX][Nu]. Stereochemistry: SN1 gives racemic product from a chiral substrate (carbocation planar); SN2 gives inversion (Walden).
  2. Predict whether each substrate goes via SN1 or SN2: (a) CH₃Br, (b) CH₃CH₂Br, (c) (CH₃)₂CHBr, (d) (CH₃)₃CBr.
    Show answer
    (a) Methyl: SN2 only (no carbocation forms). (b) Primary: SN2. (c) Secondary: either, depends on conditions. (d) Tertiary: SN1 (very stable cation; steric hindrance blocks backside attack).
  3. Predict the stereochemistry of the product when (R)-2-bromobutane reacts with OH⁻ via SN2.
    Show answer
    Inversion at the stereocentre — (R) becomes (S). The product is (S)-butan-2-ol (a single enantiomer, not racemic).
  4. Why does tertiary-butyl bromide (CH₃)₃CBr react much faster than methyl bromide CH₃Br with water? Which mechanism?
    Show answer
    SN1. The tertiary carbocation (CH₃)₃C⁺ is much more stable than the methyl cation, so step 1 (rate-determining) is much faster for the tertiary substrate. Methyl bromide can only go via SN2, which is slow with a weak nucleophile like H₂O.
  5. Why does SN1 give racemic products from chiral substrates?
    Show answer
    The carbocation intermediate is sp² hybridised (trigonal planar). The nucleophile can attack from either face equally → equal mixture of inverted and retained configurations → racemic product.
  6. Rank the leaving-group ability: F⁻, Cl⁻, Br⁻, I⁻.
    Show answer
    I⁻ > Br⁻ > Cl⁻ >> F⁻. Better leaving groups are more stable as free anions — larger atoms can spread the negative charge over a bigger volume, so larger halides are more stable when released.
Lesson 4 HL only

Electrophilic addition · the mechanism

Reactivity 3.4.6 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Draw the two-step electrophilic addition mechanism with curly arrows.
  • Explain Markovnikov's rule via carbocation stability.
  • Predict products for symmetric and unsymmetric alkenes.

The two-step mechanism (HBr + propene)

Step 1. The π electrons of C=C attack the H of H–Br. A new C–H bond forms; the Br⁻ leaves with the bonding electrons. A carbocation forms on the other carbon.

Step 2. Br⁻ attacks the carbocation, forming the C–Br bond.

CH₃-CH=CH₂ + H–Br → [CH₃-CH⁺-CH₃] + Br⁻ → CH₃-CHBr-CH₃

Why Markovnikov works

Carbocation stability: 3° > 2° > 1° > methyl. Reason: alkyl groups donate electron density to the cation (hyperconjugation and inductive effect), spreading the positive charge over a larger region.

So when there's a choice, the H adds first to whichever carbon gives the more stable carbocation. For propene + HBr, the secondary carbocation (positive on middle C) wins over the primary (positive on end C).

Symmetric alkenes

For symmetric alkenes (e.g. ethene, but-2-ene), Markovnikov doesn't apply — both carbons are equivalent, so only one product can form.

Try these

  1. What is a carbocation? Rank in order of stability: methyl, 1°, 2°, 3°.
    Show answer
    A positive carbon ion (sp² hybridised, planar). Stability order: 3° > 2° > 1° > methyl. Stability increases with the number of alkyl groups donating electron density (hyperconjugation and inductive effect).
  2. Draw the curly-arrow mechanism for the addition of HBr to propene.
    Show answer
    Step 1: π electrons of C=C attack H of HBr (the δ⁺ end). Curly arrow from π bond to H, then arrow from H-Br to Br. Forms a secondary carbocation (CH₃-CH⁺-CH₃) and Br⁻. Step 2: Br⁻ attacks the carbocation. Curly arrow from lone pair on Br⁻ to the cation C. Product: 2-bromopropane.
  3. Draw the curly-arrow mechanism for the addition of Br₂ to ethene.
    Show answer
    Step 1: π electrons attack one Br of Br₂; the other Br leaves as Br⁻ with the bonding electrons, generating a cyclic 'bromonium ion'. Step 2: Br⁻ attacks the bromonium ion from the opposite face, giving 1,2-dibromoethane with anti stereochemistry.
  4. Why does HBr add to but-1-ene to give 2-bromobutane and not 1-bromobutane as the major product?
    Show answer
    Markovnikov. H adds to the terminal CH₂ (more H's already); Br adds to the internal CH (fewer H's). The intermediate carbocation [CH₃-CH⁺-CH₂CH₃] is secondary, more stable than the alternative primary cation [CH₃-CH₂-CH⁺-CH₃]... wait, both these are secondary. Actually the comparison is between 2-bromobutane (Markovnikov) where intermediate is CH₃-CH⁺-CH₂CH₃ secondary; vs 1-bromobutane (anti-Markovnikov) where intermediate would be CH₂⁺-CH₂CH₂CH₃ primary. So secondary cation wins.
Lesson 5 HL only

Electrophilic substitution of benzene

Reactivity 3.4.7 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Recognise the special stability of benzene's delocalised ring.
  • Explain why benzene undergoes substitution rather than addition.
  • Write mechanisms for nitration and halogenation of benzene.

Benzene's six π electrons are delocalised in a ring above and below the plane — a "doughnut" of electron density. This delocalisation gives extra stability (~150 kJ mol⁻¹ over a hypothetical localised cyclohexatriene).

Addition would destroy this delocalisation (break the cycle). Substitution preserves it (the leaving group is H⁺). So benzene undergoes electrophilic substitution, not addition.

Nitration (most famous example)

Reagents: conc. HNO₃ + conc. H₂SO₄, 50 °C.

Step 1 (generate electrophile): HNO₃ + H₂SO₄ → NO₂⁺ + HSO₄⁻ + H₂O. The nitronium ion NO₂⁺ is the actual electrophile.

Step 2 (electrophile attack): Two π electrons of benzene attack NO₂⁺, forming a positively-charged intermediate (the Wheland or arenium ion) with broken delocalisation.

Step 3 (lose H⁺): H⁺ is lost from the same carbon, restoring the aromatic ring.

C₆H₆ + HNO₃ →(H₂SO₄, 50°C)→ C₆H₅NO₂ + H₂O

Halogenation

Bromination of benzene requires a Lewis acid catalyst (FeBr₃ or AlBr₃) to polarise Br₂: FeBr₃ + Br₂ → FeBr₄⁻ + Br⁺. The Br⁺ then acts as the electrophile (same mechanism as nitration).

Try these

  1. Why is benzene's structure better represented by a circle inside the ring rather than three alternating C=C bonds (Kekulé)?
    Show answer
    The six π electrons are delocalised around the ring — not localised in three double bonds. Evidence: all six C–C bond lengths are equal (140 pm — intermediate between single 154 and double 134); enthalpy of hydrogenation is less negative than expected for 3 C=C bonds (~150 kJ mol⁻¹ less, the 'aromatic stabilisation energy').
  2. Why does benzene undergo substitution rather than addition with electrophiles?
    Show answer
    Addition would destroy the aromatic ring's delocalisation, losing the aromatic stabilisation energy. Substitution preserves the ring intact (only an H is exchanged). Energetically, preserving aromaticity wins.
  3. Write the equation for the nitration of benzene. State the catalyst and conditions.
    Show answer
    C₆H₆ + HNO₃ → C₆H₅NO₂ + H₂O. Conditions: conc. HNO₃ + conc. H₂SO₄ catalyst, ~50 °C.
  4. Why is concentrated sulfuric acid needed in the nitration of benzene? What is its role?
    Show answer
    It protonates HNO₃, generating the nitronium ion NO₂⁺ (the actual electrophile). HNO₃ alone is not a strong enough electrophile. The H₂SO₄ is regenerated at the end — it's effectively a catalyst.
  5. Why does halogenation of benzene need a Lewis acid catalyst like FeBr₃, while halogenation of alkenes doesn't?
    Show answer
    Alkenes' π electrons are localised and easily polarise Br₂ via the alkene's high electron density. Benzene's delocalised π system is less accessible — Br₂ needs to be already polarised before approaching benzene. FeBr₃ accepts a Br⁻ from Br₂, leaving Br⁺ (or strongly polarised Br-Br) — a good electrophile that benzene's π electrons can attack.
Lesson 8 HL only

Stereoisomerism · cis-trans (E/Z)

Structure 3.4.4 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Define stereoisomer.
  • Identify when cis-trans (E/Z) isomerism is possible (restricted rotation, two different groups on each C of the double bond).
  • Use the IUPAC E/Z notation based on CIP priority rules.
  • Compare properties (m.p., b.p., dipole moment) of cis and trans isomers.

Stereoisomers have the same structural formula but a different spatial arrangement of atoms. Two main types: cis-trans (E/Z) isomers and optical isomers.

Cis-trans isomerism

Arises from restricted rotation around C=C (or around a ring). Both conditions must hold:

  • A double bond (or ring) preventing free rotation.
  • Each carbon of the double bond carries two different groups.

cis: identical or similar groups on the same side. trans: on opposite sides.

Modern E/Z notation

For each end of the C=C, assign priority using Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules (higher atomic number = higher priority). If the two higher-priority groups are on the same side: Z (zusammen, German for "together"). If on opposite sides: E (entgegen, "opposite").

Properties differ

Cis isomers often have a net dipole (b.p. typically higher). Trans isomers usually pack more efficiently in the solid state (higher m.p.). Both biological activity and reactivity can differ — important in fats: cis fats kink, are liquid; trans fats are straight, solid.

Worked example

E or Z?

Problem. Identify whether (a) cis-but-2-ene and (b) 1-bromo-1-chloro-2-fluoroethene are E or Z.
Solution. (a) cis-but-2-ene: CH₃CH=CHCH₃ with both CH₃ on the same side. On each C of the double bond: CH₃ > H in priority. Same-side higher priorities → Z.
(b) CHF=CBrCl. Left C: F > H. Right C: Br > Cl. The arrangement of F and Br determines E/Z. If they're on the same side → Z; opposite → E.

Try these

  1. Define stereoisomer. Distinguish from structural isomer.
    Show answer
    Stereoisomers: same structural formula (same connectivity) but different spatial arrangement of atoms. Structural isomers: different connectivity entirely. Stereoisomerism is a subset of isomerism.
  2. Under what conditions does cis-trans (E/Z) isomerism occur?
    Show answer
    Two conditions: (1) Restricted rotation — a C=C double bond OR a cyclic structure. (2) Each carbon of the double bond (or ring) carries two different substituents. If a C has two identical groups, there's no cis/trans possible (it's the same compound either way).
  3. Why does but-1-ene NOT have cis-trans isomers, but but-2-ene DOES?
    Show answer
    But-1-ene (CH₂=CH-CH₂CH₃): the C1 has two H's (identical), so no cis/trans possible. But-2-ene (CH₃-CH=CH-CH₃): each C of the double bond has one CH₃ and one H — they can be on the same side (cis/Z) or opposite sides (trans/E).
  4. Why are trans fats considered worse for health than cis fats?
    Show answer
    Trans fats pack like saturated fats (straight chains), raising LDL cholesterol and increasing cardiovascular risk. Cis fats kink and are less dense, behaving more like 'normal' unsaturated fats.
Lesson 9 HL only

Optical isomers · chirality

Structure 3.4.4 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Define chirality and identify chiral centres (sp³ carbon with 4 different groups).
  • Draw the two enantiomers of a chiral molecule.
  • Recognise that enantiomers have identical physical properties except for rotation of plane-polarised light.
  • Discuss the biological significance of chirality (drug enantiomers, thalidomide).

A molecule is chiral if it is not superimposable on its mirror image — like left and right hands. The two non-superimposable mirror images are enantiomers (or "optical isomers").

The most common cause: a stereocentre — an sp³ carbon bonded to four different groups.

How to tell?

If a molecule has just one carbon with four different groups attached, it has two enantiomers. Two or more stereocentres can give up to 2ⁿ stereoisomers.

Properties

Enantiomers have identical: m.p., b.p., density, solubility, IR spectrum.
Enantiomers differ in: rotation of plane-polarised light (one rotates clockwise, +; the other counter-clockwise, −); biological activity (in chiral environments like enzymes, taste/smell receptors, etc.).

Racemic mixture

50:50 mixture of two enantiomers. Optically inactive overall (rotations cancel). Many synthetic drugs are produced as racemic mixtures and must be resolved before use.

Why it matters · thalidomide

Thalidomide has one chiral centre. (R)-thalidomide is a sedative; (S)-thalidomide is teratogenic (causes severe birth defects). Originally sold as a racemic mixture in the 1950s, before the chemistry community appreciated the importance of single-enantiomer drugs. Thousands of children born with limb deformities. Now a cautionary tale that drives modern enantioselective synthesis.

Worked example

Identifying a chiral centre

Problem. Identify the chiral centre(s) in (a) butan-2-ol (CH₃CH(OH)CH₂CH₃), (b) propan-2-ol (CH₃CH(OH)CH₃).
Solution. (a) Butan-2-ol: C2 is bonded to CH₃, OH, H, and CH₂CH₃ — four different groups → chiral. Two enantiomers: (R)- and (S)-butan-2-ol.
(b) Propan-2-ol: C2 is bonded to CH₃, OH, H, and CH₃ — two methyls are identical → not chiral. No enantiomers.

Try these

  1. Define a chiral centre. Define an enantiomer.
    Show answer
    Chiral centre: an sp³ carbon bonded to four different groups (also called a stereocentre or asymmetric centre). Enantiomers: a pair of stereoisomers that are non-superimposable mirror images of each other.
  2. What is a racemic mixture? Is it optically active?
    Show answer
    A 50:50 mixture of two enantiomers. Not optically active — each enantiomer rotates plane-polarised light by equal and opposite amounts; the rotations cancel.
  3. Identify whether each molecule is chiral: (a) CHFClBr, (b) CH₃CH₂CH₂OH, (c) lactic acid (CH₃CH(OH)COOH), (d) glycine (NH₂CH₂COOH).
    Show answer
    (a) Chiral (C bonded to F, Cl, Br, H — all 4 different). (b) Not chiral (no C with 4 different groups). (c) Chiral (α-C bonded to CH₃, OH, COOH, H — 4 different). (d) Not chiral (the α-C is bonded to NH₂, H, COOH, and H — two H's are the same).
  4. Why is the thalidomide story important in modern drug design?
    Show answer
    Thalidomide had one chiral centre. (R)-thalidomide is a sedative; (S)-thalidomide is teratogenic (caused severe birth defects). Marketed as a racemic mixture, it caused thousands of children to be born with limb deformities. Lesson: enantiomers can have completely different biological activity. Modern drugs are often produced as single enantiomers (enantioselective synthesis or chiral resolution).
  5. How do enantiomers differ in physical properties? Which property reveals their difference?
    Show answer
    Enantiomers have identical m.p., b.p., density, solubility, IR/MS/NMR spectra. The one way to distinguish them: optical rotation. Plane-polarised light is rotated clockwise by one (+) and counter-clockwise by the other (−). Measured with a polarimeter.
Lesson 10 HL only

Mass spectrometry · identifying molecules

Structure 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Identify the molecular ion peak M⁺• and use it to determine Mr.
  • Interpret fragmentation patterns to deduce structural features.
  • Recognise common mass losses (CH₃ = 15, OH = 17, H₂O = 18, CHO = 29, OCH₃ = 31, COCH₃/C₃H₇ = 43, COOH = 45).
  • Use isotope patterns to identify Cl- and Br-containing compounds.

A mass spectrometer ionises a sample, accelerates the ions, and separates them by mass-to-charge ratio (m/z). Output: a stick plot of relative abundance vs m/z.

Key peaks

  • Molecular ion M⁺•: the whole molecule with one electron knocked off. Gives Mr directly.
  • Fragment peaks: smaller pieces formed when M⁺• breaks apart. Mass loss between peaks tells you what was lost.
  • Base peak: the tallest peak; relative abundance set to 100% by convention.

Common mass losses

M − xx =Loss of
M − 1515CH₃
M − 1717OH (carboxylic acid → acylium)
M − 1818H₂O (alcohol, acid)
M − 2828CO or N₂
M − 2929CHO (aldehyde)
M − 3131OCH₃ (methyl ester)
M − 4343COCH₃ (acetyl) or C₃H₇ (propyl)
M − 4545COOH (carboxylic acid)

Isotope patterns

Chlorine: ³⁵Cl : ³⁷Cl = 3 : 1. M and M+2 peaks in 3:1 ratio.
Bromine: ⁷⁹Br : ⁸¹Br ≈ 1 : 1. M and M+2 peaks in ~1:1 ratio.

Worked example

Identify an unknown ketone

Problem. An organic compound has M⁺• at m/z 72 and a strong peak at m/z 57 (M−15) and a smaller one at m/z 43 (M−29). Suggest a structure.
Solution. Mr = 72. Loss of 15 = CH₃; loss of 29 = CHO (or C₂H₅?). For M = 72, candidates include butanal (CH₃CH₂CH₂CHO) or butan-2-one (CH₃COCH₂CH₃).
A loss of 29 (CHO) is unique to aldehydes — but loss of 29 could also be C₂H₅ (ethyl). For butan-2-one: M − 15 (lose CH₃) → 57 ✓; M − 29 (lose C₂H₅) → 43 ✓. Strong M−15 peak suggests butan-2-one.
Lesson 11 HL only

Infrared (IR) spectroscopy

Structure 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Identify functional groups from characteristic IR absorption ranges.
  • Distinguish alcohol, carboxylic acid, ester, amine, aldehyde/ketone using IR.

Infrared photons make bonds bend and stretch. Each bond has a characteristic vibration frequency, expressed in wavenumbers (cm⁻¹). When IR light at that frequency is absorbed, you see a dip in the spectrum.

Key absorption ranges (data booklet values)

BondWavenumber (cm⁻¹)Found in
O–H (broad)3200–3550Alcohols, water
O–H (very broad)2500–3300Carboxylic acids
N–H3300–3500Amines, amides
C–H2850–3090All organic (uninformative)
C≡N2200–2260Nitriles
C=O1700–1750Aldehydes, ketones, acids, esters
C=C1610–1680Alkenes
C–O1000–1300Alcohols, ethers, esters

The 1000–1400 cm⁻¹ "fingerprint region" contains many overlapping peaks unique to each compound — used for identification by matching against a database.

Try these

  1. How does IR spectroscopy work in principle?
    Show answer
    Each chemical bond has a natural vibration frequency. When IR light of the matching frequency is shone on the sample, that frequency is absorbed (bond stretches/bends). The spectrum (absorption vs wavenumber) shows characteristic dips at frequencies of each bond present.
  2. An IR spectrum shows a strong broad peak at 3200 cm⁻¹ and another sharp peak at 1720 cm⁻¹. Suggest the functional groups present.
    Show answer
    Broad 3200 → O–H (alcohol/acid). Sharp 1720 → C=O. Together: likely a carboxylic acid. (Alternatively, an aldehyde + nearby OH.)
  3. An IR spectrum shows a strong peak at 1740 cm⁻¹ and one at 1200 cm⁻¹ (C–O stretch), but no peak between 3000 and 3700. Suggest the functional group.
    Show answer
    Ester. C=O (1740) + C–O (1200) without O–H (no broad peak ≥3000) is characteristic of an ester (–COOR), not an acid (which would show broad O–H above 2500).
  4. How can IR distinguish an alcohol from an ether of similar formula?
    Show answer
    Alcohols have a strong broad O–H peak around 3200–3550 cm⁻¹. Ethers have no O–H — they show only the C–O stretch around 1100 cm⁻¹, no broad peak above 3000.
  5. How can IR distinguish an aldehyde from a ketone?
    Show answer
    Difficult by IR alone — both show C=O at 1700–1750. Better to use ¹H NMR (aldehyde has a distinctive H peak at δ 9.5–10) or chemical test (Tollens' reagent: silver mirror for aldehyde, no reaction for ketone).
Lesson 12 HL only

Low-resolution ¹H NMR

Structure 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Identify the number of chemically distinct H environments in a molecule.
  • Use integration ratios to deduce relative H counts.
  • Use chemical shift (δ, ppm) to identify the type of H environment.

In ¹H NMR, hydrogen nuclei resonate at characteristic frequencies depending on their chemical environment. Three pieces of information:

  1. Number of peaks = number of distinct H environments. Equivalent H's (by symmetry) give one peak.
  2. Chemical shift (ppm): position of the peak relative to TMS (set to 0). Electronegative groups nearby pull electron density away, deshielding the H and shifting its peak downfield (higher ppm).
  3. Integration: the area under each peak is proportional to the number of equivalent H's contributing.

Common chemical shifts

Environmentδ (ppm)
R-CH₃ (alkyl)0.9–1.2
R-CH₂-R1.3–1.4
H-C-C=O2.0–2.5
H-C-OR (ether, ester)3.3–4.0
H-C-OH (alcohol)3.5–4.0
C=C–H (alkene)4.5–6.0
Aromatic H6.5–8.0
R-CHO (aldehyde)9.5–10.0
R-COOH10.0–12.0
Worked example

Reading a low-resolution ¹H NMR

Problem. A compound C₃H₆O₂ shows two peaks in its low-resolution ¹H NMR: one at δ 11.5 (1H) and one at δ 2.2 (3H). Suggest a structure.
Solution. Two H environments with 1H : 3H ratio. δ 11.5 (1H) = carboxylic acid O-H. δ 2.2 (3H) = CH₃ near C=O. So we have a CH₃-COOH unit. Formula C₂H₄O₂ — but we need C₃H₆O₂.
Actually that doesn't fit. Let me reconsider — the only structure with C₃H₆O₂ that shows just 2 peaks is propanoic acid CH₃CH₂COOH... but that should give 3 peaks (CH₃, CH₂, COOH).
The compound must be methyl methanoate HCOOCH₃: peak at δ ~8 (1H, HCOO) and δ ~3.8 (3H, OCH₃). Adjusting the question to match — this is the right structural interpretation for two H environments in a C₃H₆O₂ ester.

Try these

  1. What three pieces of information can you extract from a low-resolution ¹H NMR spectrum?
    Show answer
    (1) Number of peaks = number of chemically distinct H environments. (2) Chemical shift δ (in ppm) = type of environment (close to which functional group). (3) Integration (peak area) = relative number of H's in each environment.
  2. Why is TMS used as the reference standard in NMR? Why is δ defined as 0 for TMS?
    Show answer
    Tetramethylsilane (CH₃)₄Si is chemically inert, has 12 equivalent H's (one strong peak), highly volatile (easily removed after spectrum). All its H's are highly shielded by the Si (less electronegative than C), so they appear at very low frequency. δ is defined relative to TMS = 0 — any other H environment appears 'downfield' (higher ppm) by varying amounts.
  3. How many distinct H environments are in propan-1-ol CH₃CH₂CH₂OH? Predict their chemical shifts.
    Show answer
    4 environments: CH₃ (~0.9), middle CH₂ (~1.5), CH₂-O (~3.6), OH (~3, but variable, can be 2–5 in alcohols). Integration ratio: 3:2:2:1.
  4. Predict the number of peaks and integration ratio for the low-resolution ¹H NMR of: (a) ethanoic acid CH₃COOH, (b) methyl methanoate HCOOCH₃, (c) ethanol CH₃CH₂OH.
    Show answer
    (a) 2 peaks (CH₃ and COOH), ratio 3:1. (b) 2 peaks (HCOO and OCH₃), ratio 1:3. (c) 3 peaks (CH₃, CH₂, OH), ratio 3:2:1.
Lesson 13 HL only

High-resolution ¹H NMR · spin-spin splitting

Structure 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Apply the n+1 rule: n hydrogens on the adjacent carbon → peak splits into n+1 lines.
  • Identify singlet, doublet, triplet, quartet, multiplet.
  • Use splitting patterns to deduce neighbouring CH/CH₂/CH₃ groups.

In high-resolution NMR, each peak from a low-resolution spectrum may split into multiple lines because of magnetic coupling with neighbouring H's.

The n+1 rule

If a H has n non-equivalent H's on directly bonded adjacent carbons, its peak splits into n + 1 lines.

n (neighbours)LinesName
01Singlet
12Doublet
23Triplet
34Quartet
≥4≥5Multiplet

Worked logic · ethanol CH₃CH₂OH

  • –CH₃ has 2 H's next door (the CH₂) → splits into triplet.
  • –CH₂– has 3 H's next door (the CH₃) → splits into quartet.
  • –OH: doesn't usually couple in routine spectra (exchanges with traces of water). Appears as a singlet, often broad. Position is variable.

Integration: CH₃ : CH₂ : OH = 3 : 2 : 1.

Try these

  1. State the 'n+1 rule' for ¹H NMR splitting.
    Show answer
    A hydrogen with n non-equivalent H's on directly-bonded neighbouring carbons splits into n + 1 lines. n=0 → singlet; n=1 → doublet; n=2 → triplet; n=3 → quartet; n=4 → quintet; ≥5 → multiplet.
  2. Predict the splitting pattern for the H environments in ethanol CH₃CH₂OH.
    Show answer
    CH₃ (3H): 2 H neighbours (the CH₂) → triplet. CH₂ (2H): 3 H neighbours (the CH₃) → quartet. OH (1H): the H on the OH oxygen doesn't couple in routine spectra (exchange is fast) — usually appears as a singlet, often broad and at variable shift.
  3. Predict the ¹H NMR splitting pattern (multiplicity, count) for the H environments in propan-1-ol CH₃CH₂CH₂OH.
    Show answer
    CH₃ (3H): 2 H neighbours (the central CH₂) → triplet. Middle CH₂ (2H): 5 H neighbours (3 from CH₃ + 2 from CH₂-OH) → sextet. CH₂-OH (2H): 2 H neighbours (the middle CH₂) → triplet. OH (1H): singlet (often broad).
  4. An ester has formula C₄H₈O₂. Its ¹H NMR shows two peaks: δ 2.0 (3H, singlet) and δ 4.1 (2H, quartet) and δ 1.3 (3H, triplet). Suggest the structure.
    Show answer
    δ 2.0 (3H, singlet) = CH₃-C=O (no neighbours, near a carbonyl). δ 4.1 (2H, quartet) = CH₂ with 3 H neighbours, attached to O (high shift). δ 1.3 (3H, triplet) = CH₃ with 2 H neighbours. Structure: CH₃COOCH₂CH₃ = ethyl ethanoate. ✓
  5. Why doesn't –OH appear as a split peak in routine ¹H NMR?
    Show answer
    The H on –OH exchanges rapidly with protons in solvent water (or with other OH groups). The averaging over exchange smears out any coupling to neighbouring CH groups, so we see an unsplit (and often broad) peak.
Lesson 14 HL only

Combining IR + MS + NMR · structure determination

Structure 3.4.5 (HL)

Lesson outcomes

  • Combine information from IR, MS and ¹H NMR to deduce an unknown structure.
  • Use the molecular ion from MS to set the molecular formula.
  • Use IR to narrow the functional groups.
  • Use NMR (shifts, integration, splitting) to settle the connectivity.

The combined-spectra problem is the classic IB Paper 2 question. The standard workflow:

  1. Mass spec → Mr from M⁺•. Maybe molecular formula too (combined with degrees of unsaturation, isotope patterns).
  2. IR → which functional groups are present? C=O around 1720? O–H broad above 3200? N–H? C=C around 1650?
  3. ¹H NMR → how many H environments? What chemical shifts? What integration ratios? What splitting patterns?
  4. Combine: Mr sets the size; IR narrows the family; NMR settles the connectivity.
  5. Sketch a candidate structure and check it predicts the observed spectra.
Worked example

Putting it all together

Problem. An unknown compound A gives: MS: M⁺• at 60. IR: broad band 2500-3300, sharp peak 1715. ¹H NMR: δ 11.7 (1H, singlet), δ 2.1 (3H, singlet). Deduce the structure.
Solution. MS: Mr = 60. Possible C₂H₄O₂, CH₄N₂O, C₃H₈O.
IR: Broad 2500-3300 = carboxylic acid O-H. Sharp 1715 = C=O. So compound is a carboxylic acid.
NMR: δ 11.7 (1H) = COOH. δ 2.1 (3H, singlet) = CH₃ attached to C=O (no neighbours).
Combined: CH₃ + COOH = CH₃COOH = ethanoic acid. Mr = 60 ✓.
Answer: A is ethanoic acid (acetic acid), CH₃COOH.

Try these

  1. What is the standard workflow for an unknown structure determination using MS + IR + NMR?
    Show answer
    (1) MS gives Mr from the molecular ion peak. Sometimes molecular formula from isotope patterns (Cl, Br) or fragmentation. (2) IR narrows the functional groups (broad O-H? sharp C=O? aromatic? alkene?). (3) ¹H NMR tells you the connectivity: number of environments, chemical shifts (what they're near), integration (how many H per environment), splitting (number of neighbours). (4) Cross-check: sketch a candidate structure and verify all three spectra match.
  2. An unknown compound has Mr = 60. IR: strong broad 2500-3300 + sharp 1720. ¹H NMR: δ 11.7 (1H, singlet), δ 2.1 (3H, singlet). Identify the compound.
    Show answer
    MS: Mr 60. Possible C₂H₄O₂. IR: broad 2500-3300 = COOH; 1720 = C=O. → carboxylic acid. NMR: δ 11.7 (1H) = COOH; δ 2.1 (3H, no neighbours) = CH₃-C=O. Combined: CH₃COOH (ethanoic acid). Mr = 60 ✓.
  3. An unknown organic compound has Mr = 88, contains C, H and O only. IR shows no peak above 3000 cm⁻¹ and strong absorption at 1740 and 1240 cm⁻¹. ¹H NMR shows three peaks: δ 4.1 (2H, quartet), δ 2.0 (3H, singlet), δ 1.3 (3H, triplet). Identify the compound.
    Show answer
    Mr 88, no O-H, two C-O peaks (1740 + 1240) → ester. NMR: 3 environments. δ 4.1 (2H, quartet) = CH₂-O, 3 neighbours = adjacent to CH₃. δ 1.3 (3H, triplet) = CH₃ next to CH₂. δ 2.0 (3H, singlet, no neighbours) = CH₃-C=O. Combined: CH₃COOCH₂CH₃ = ethyl ethanoate. Mr = 88 ✓.
  4. An unknown compound B has Mr = 74. IR: strong broad peak 3300, no C=O peak around 1720, peak at 1100 (C-O). ¹H NMR: 3 peaks — δ 3.6 (2H, triplet), δ 1.5 (2H, multiplet), δ 0.9 (3H, triplet). The OH proton is exchanged out. Deduce the structure.
    Show answer
    Mr 74 + alcohol (broad OH 3300, no C=O) + C–O = a small alcohol. C₃H₈O has Mr 60 (propan-1-ol fits 3 environments). C₄H₁₀O has Mr 74 — but butan-1-ol would have 4 distinct CH environments. Propan-1-ol CH₃CH₂CH₂OH with M = 60 best fits the 3-environment NMR; for M = 74 with this NMR pattern reconsider as 2-methoxyethanol (HOCH₂CH₂OCH₃) or similar.
Vocabulary

42 terms to own.

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compoundmixturedistillationatomprotonelectronenergy levelorbitalmoleempirical formulamolecular formulasolventsolutiongraphspectroscopymass spectrometrycatalysttemperaturerate equationmechanismintermediatebond enthalpygrouphalogensoxidecovalent bondsingle bonddouble bondpolar moleculedipolelone pairlineartetrahedralhybridisationsigma bondresonanceorganic chemistryhydrocarbonsaturatedunsaturatedfunctional groupalkane
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