Chapter 4: Q4.2-4CC (page 62)
See Figures 4.5a and 4.7. Can propane (C3H8) form isomers? Explain.
Short Answer
No, propane cannot form isomers as it contains only three carbon atoms which cannot form a branched-chain structure.
Chapter 4: Q4.2-4CC (page 62)
See Figures 4.5a and 4.7. Can propane (C3H8) form isomers? Explain.
No, propane cannot form isomers as it contains only three carbon atoms which cannot form a branched-chain structure.
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Get started for freeSuppose you had an organic molecule such as cysteine (see Figure 4.9, sulfhydryl group example), and you chemically removed the —NH2 group and replaced it with —COOH. Draw this structure. How would this change the chemical properties of the molecule? Is the central carbon asymmetric before the change? After?
Which action could produce a carbonyl group?
(A) the replacement of the –OH of a carboxyl group with hydrogen
(B) the addition of a thiol to a hydroxyl
(C) the addition of a hydroxyl to a phosphate
(D) the replacement of the nitrogen of an amine with oxygen
Which functional group is not present in this molecule?
carboxyl
sulfhydryl
hydroxyl
amino
(a) Draw a structural formula for C2H4.
(b) Draw the trans isomer of C2H2Cl2.
Which chemical group is most likely to be responsible for an organic molecule behaving as a base (see Concept 3.3)
hydroxyl
carbonyl
amino
phosphate
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