29th ICHO Prep Prob PDF
29th ICHO Prep Prob PDF
29th ICHO Prep Prob PDF
OLYMPIAD
PREPARATORY PROBLEMS
Funding for the printing of this collection of preparatory problems was generously
provided by the Department of Chemistry of the University of British Columbia.
Andr Bandrauk
Universit de Sherbrooke
Gordon Bates
Suzanne Black
McGill University
David Burns
McGill University
Robert Cook
Bishops University
Jean-Pierre Farant
McGill University
Franois Gauvin
Bishops University
Michael Gresser
Merck-Frosst Canada
John Harrod
McGill University
Gregory Jerkiewicz
Universit de Sherbrooke
Normand Voyer
Universit Laval
Harold Wilson
- iii -
Solid state
Electrochemistry and the solid state
Electrochemistry
Electrochemistry
Electrochemistry
Biochemistry
Problem 6:
Problem 7:
Problem 8:
Problem 9:
Problem 10:
Organic Chemistry
Problem 11:
Problem 12:
Problem 13:
Problem 14:
Problem 15:
Problem 16:
Problem 17:
Problem 18:
Problem 19:
Problem 20:
Problem 21:
Problem 22:
Problem 23:
Inorganic Chemistry
Problem 24: Processes involved in the formation of teeth and bones
Problem 25: Structural analysis (unknown determination)
Problem 26: Silicon carbide preparations
Problem 27: Silicon vs. phosphorus oxides
Problem 28: High Tc superconductors
Problem 29:
Problem 30:
NO chemistry
Inorganic complexes
Physical/Theoretical
Problem 31: Thermodynamic relationships
Problem 32: Thermodynamics of phase changes
Problem 33: Thermodynamics of chemical reactions
Problem 34: Gas phase kinetics
Problem 35: Solution phase kinetics
Problem 36: Molecular orbital theory
Problem 37: Molecular orbital theory
Analytical Chemistry
Problem 38: Dissolved oxygen by titration
Problem 39: Phosphate determination by absorbance spectroscopy
Problem 40: Ligand complexes and Kf by absorbance spectroscopy
Problem 41:
Problem 42:
Problem 43:
Experimental Chemistry
Problem 44: Qualitative organic analysis
Problem 45: Lead concentration by back titration with EDTA
Problem 46: Qualitative inorganic analysis (electrochemistry)
Problem 47: Ksp determination by titration
Problem 48:
Problem 49:
Problem 50:
-v-
Preface
During the 28th International Chemistry Olympiad held in Moscow in July 1996, many of the
mentors informally expressed concerns regarding the increasing level of difficulty of the sets of
preparatory problems prepared by hosting nations. A general concensus became apparent: some
of the topics were felt to greatly exceed the knowledge base which a high school student, albeit
even some of the best high school students in the world, could be reasonably expected to have
without being exposed to rigorous and extensive additional study. It was strongly felt by some
delegates that such high-level material would challenge even university students specializing in
chemistry and that this situation was leading to overtraining by some competitors.
In the collection of problems presented herein, we have attempted to address this concern. It is
hoped that you will find in this material a blend of the interesting and difficult along with some
more modest questions which are also felt to be of significant challenge to the large majority of
the student competitors in the upcoming 29th International Chemistry Olympiad to be held in
Montral, Canada in July 1997. There are some areas of emphasis which certainly go beyond the
routine material studied in most high schools around the world. But this is how it should be
since the competitors involved are among the best that our countries have to offer. However, it is
felt that even these topics and the level of expertise expected can be mastered by our students
without significant additional tutoring. For example, the biochemistry section concentrates on
the organic chemical aspects of one important class of biomolecules (carbohydrates) but
deliberately does not examine the related metabolic pathways of these compounds. The coverage
of the carbohydrates is at the level found in many introductory textbooks on organic chemistry,
rather than that found in a senior university course specializing in the study of biochemistry, an
entire subject in its own right.
The rules for eligibility of the competitors is summarized below for the benefit of our newer
friends who have recently become involved in the International Chemistry Olympiad.
1)
2)
3)
The competitors must be students of secondary schools which are not specilized in
chemistry and, moreover, must be under the age of 20 on July 1 of the year of the
competition.
The competitors must be passport holders of the country they represent or they have taken
part in the secondary school educational system of the country for more than one
academic year.
Training or any other special instruction, that is to be carried out for a selected group of
50 or fewer students, containing the IChO team, must be no longer than two weeks.
- vii -
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATION
1
main groups
2
transition metals
3
lanthanide and actinide metals
4
Pauli exclusion principle
5
Hunds rule
TRENDS IN THE PERIODIC TABLE (MAIN GROUPS)
6
electronegativity
7
electron affinity
8
first ionization energy
9
atomic size
10
ionic size
11
highest oxidation number
TRENDS IN PHYSICAL PROPERTIES (MAIN GROUPS)
12
melting point
13
boiling point
14
metal character
15
magnetic properties
16
thermal properties
STRUCTURES
17
metal structures
18
ionic crystal structures
simple molecular structures with central atom
19
exceeding the octet rule
20
stereochemistry
NOMENCLATURE
21
main group compounds
22
transition metal compounds
23
simple metal complexes
24
multicenter metal complexes
25
coordination number
STOICHIOMETRY
26
balancing equations
27
mass and volume relationships
28
empirical formula
29
Avogadros number
30
concentration calculations
ISOTOPES
31
counting of nucleons
32
radioactive decay
33
nuclear reaction (alpha, beta, gamma, neutrino)
NATURAL CYCLES
34
nitrogen
35
oxygen
36
carbon
s-BLOCK
products of reaction of group I and II metals
37
with water, basicity of the products
38
products of reaction of the metals with halogens
1
2
3
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- ix -
40
heavier elements are more reactive
41
lithium combine with H2 and N2, forming LiH and Li3N
p-BLOCK
42
stoichiometry of simplest nonmetal hydrides
43
properties of metal hydrides
44
acid-base properties of CH4, NH3, H2S, H2O, HX
45
NO react with O2 to form NO2
46
there is equilibrium between NO2 and N2O4
47
products of reaction of NO2 with water
48
HNO2 and it's salts are reductants
49
HNO3 and it's salts are oxidants
50
N2H4 is a liquid and reductant
51
there exist acids like H2N2O2, HN3
to remember, what are products of reduction of nitrates
52
of HNO3 with different metals and reductants
53
reaction of Na2S2O3 with iodine
54
other thioacids, polyacids, peroxoacids
B(III), Al(III), Si(IV), P(V), S(IV), S(VI), O(II), F(I),
Cl(I), Cl(III), Cl(V) and Cl(VIII) are normal oxidation states
of 2nd and 3rd row elements in compounds
55
with halogens and in oxoanions
56
compounds of nonmetals with other oxidation states
57
the preferred oxidation states are Sn(II), Pb(II), Bi(III)
products of reactions of nonmetal oxides with water and stoichiometry
58
of resulting acids
59
reactions of halogens with water
60
reactivity and oxidizing power of halogens decrease from F2 to I2
61
differences of chemistry between row 4 and row 3 elements
d-BLOCK
common oxidation states of the common d-block metals are Cr(III),
Cr(VI), Mn(II), Mn(IV), Mn(VII),
Fe(II), Fe(III), Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(I), Cu(II),
62
Ag(I), Zn(II), Hg(I), Hg(II)
63
colors of the listed common ions in aqueous solution
64
other oxidation states and chemistry of other d-block elements
65
Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Co, Zn dissolve in dilute HCl; Cu, Ag, Hg do not dissolve
66
products of the dissolution are (2+) cations
67
passivation of Cr, Fe (and also Al)
Cr(OH)3 and Zn(OH)2 amphoteric, other common hydroxides are not
68
MnO4-, CrO42-, Cr2O72- are strong oxidants
69
products of reduction of MnO4- depending on pH
70
polyanions other than Cr2O72OTHER INORGANIC PROBLEMS
71
industrial production of H2SO4, NH3, Na2CO3, Na, Cl2, NaOH
72
chemistry of lanthanides and actinides
73
chemistry of noble gases
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ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
ALKANES
74
isomers of butane
75
naming (IUPAC)
1
1
- xi -
76
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118
119
120
nomenclature
keto/enol tautomerism
preparation - oxidation of alcohols
1
2
1
- xiii -
121
- from carbon monoxide
122
reactions: - oxidation of aldehydes
123
- reduction with Zn metal
124
- addition of HCN
125
of NaHSO3
126
of NH2OH
127
- aldol condensation
128
- Cannizzaro (PhCH2OH disproportionation)
129
- Grignard reaction
130
- Fehling (Cu2O) and Tollens (Ag mirror)
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
131
inductive effect and strength
132
equivalence of oxygen atoms in anions
133
preparation: from esters
134
- from nitriles
135
products of reaction with alcohols (esters)
136
mechanism of esterification
137
isotopes in mechanism elucidation
138
nomenclature : acid halides
139
preparation of acid chlorides
140
amides from acid chlorides
141
nitriles from acid chlorides
142
properties and preparation of anhydrides
143
oxalic acid: name and formula
144
multifunctional acids
145
optical activity (e.g. lactic acid)
146
R/S nomenclature
147
plant vs. animal fats - differences
NITROGEN COMPOUNDS
148
amines are basic
149
comparing aliphatic vs. aromatic
150
names: primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary
151
identification of primary/secondary/tertiary/quaternary amines in laboratory
preparation of amines
152
- from halogen compounds
153
- from nitro compounds (PhNH2 from PhNO2)
154
- from amides (Hoffmann)
155
mechanism of Hoffmann rearrangement in acidic/basic medium
156
basicity amines vs. amides
diazotation products
157
- of aliphatic amines
158
- of aromatic amines
159
dyes: color vs. structure (chromophore groups)
160
nitro compounds : aci/nitro tautomerism
161
Beckmann (oxime - amide) rearrangements
SOME LARGE MOLECULES
162
hydrophilic/hydrophobic groups
163
micelle structure
164
preparation of soaps
3
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2
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165
166
products of polymerization of
- styrene
- ethene
2
1
- xv -
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
- polyamides
- phenol + aldehydes
- polyurethanes
polymers - cross-linking
- structures (isotactic etc.)
- chain mechanism of formation
rubber composition
BIOCHEMISTRY
AMINO ACIDS AND PEPTIDES
174
ionic structure of aminoacids
175
isoelectric point
176
20 amino acids (classification in groups)
177
20 amino acids (all structures)
178
ninhydrin reaction (including equation)
179
separation by chromatography
180
separation by electrophoresis
181
peptide linkage
PROTEINS
182
primary structure of proteins
183
-S-S- bridges
184
sequence analysis
185
secondary structures
186
details of alpha-helix structure
187
tertiary structure
188
denaturation by change of pH, temperature, metals, ethanol
189
quaternary structure
190
separation of proteins (molecule size and solubility)
191
metabolism of proteins (general)
192
proteolysis
193
transamination
194
four pathways of catabolism of amino acids
195
decarboxylation of amino acids
196
urea cycle (only results)
FATTY ACIDS AND FATS
197
IUPAC names from C4 to C18
198
trival names of most important (ca. 5) fatty acids
199
general metabolism of fats
200
beta-oxidation of fatty acids (formulas & ATP balance)
201
fatty acids and fats anabolism
202
phosphoglycerides
203
membranes
204
active transport
ENZYMES
205
general properties, active centres
206
nomenclature, kinetics, coenzymes, function of ATP etc.
CARBOHYDRATES
207
glucose and fructose: chain formulas
208
- Fischer projections
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209
210
211
- Haworth formulas
osazones
maltose as reducing sugar
3
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- xvii -
212
difference between starch and cellulose
213
difference between alpha- and beta-D glucose
214
metabolism from starch to acetyl-CoA
215
pathway to lactic acid or to ethanol; catabolism of glucose
216
ATP balance for this pathways
217
photosynthesis (products only)
218
light and dark reaction
219
detailed Calvin cycle
KREBS CYCLE AND RESPIRATION CHAIN
220
formation of CO2 in the cycle (no details)
221
intermediate compounds in the cycle
222
formation of water and ATP (no details)
223
FMN and cytochromes
224
calculation of ATP amount for 1 mol glucose
NUCLEIC ACIDS AND PROTEIN SYNTHESES
225
pyrimidine, purine
226
nucleosides, nucleotides
227
formulas of all pyrimidine and purine bases
228
difference between ribose and 2-deoxyribose
229
base combination CG and AT
230
- CG and AT - (hydrogen bonding structures)
231
difference between DNA and RNA
232
difference between mRNA and tRNA
233
hydrolysis of nucleic acids
234
semiconservative replication of DNA
235
DNA-ligase
236
RNA synthesis (transcription) without details
237
reverse transcriptase
238
use of genetic code
239
start and stop codons
240
translation steps
OTHER BIOCHEMISTRY
241
hormones, regulation
242
hormone feedback
243
insulin, glucagon, adrenaline
244
mineral metabolism (no details)
245
ions in blood
246
buffers in blood
247
haemoglobin: function & skeleton
248
- diagram of oxygen absorption
249
steps of clotting the blood
250
antigens and antibodies
251
blood groups
252
acetyl choline structure and functions
INSTRUMENTAL METHODS OF DETERMINING STRUCTURE
UV-VIS SPECTROSCOPY
253
identification of aromatic compound
254
identification of chromophore
2
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3
MASS SPECTRA
255
recognition of molecular ion
256
- fragments with a help of a table
257
- typical isotope distribution
INFRARED
258
interpretation using a table of group frequencies
259
recognition of hydrogen bonds
260
Raman spectroscopy
NMR
261
interpret. of simple spectrum (like ethanol)
262
spin-spin coupling
263
coupling constants
264
identification of o- and p- substituted benzene
13C-NMR
265
X-RAYS
266
Bragg law
267
electron density diagrams
268
coordination number
269
unit cell
270
structures of NaCl
271
structures of CsCl
272
- close-packed (2 types)
273
determining of the Avogadro constant from X-ray data
POLARIMETRY
274
calculation of specific rotation angle
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIA
275
dynamical model of chemical equilibrium
chemical equilibria expressed in terms of
276
- relative concentration
277
- relative partial pressures
the relationship between e.c. for ideal gases
278
expressed in different ways (concentration, pressure, mole fraction)
279
relation of equilibrium constant and standard Gibbs energy
IONIC EQUILIBRIA
280
Arrhenius theory of acids and bases
281
Bronsted-Lowry theory, conjugated acids & bases
282
definition of pH
283
ionic product of water
284
relation between Ka and Kb for conjugated acids and bases
285
hydrolysis of salts
286
solubility product - definition
287
calculation of solubility (in water) from solubility product
288
calculation of pH for weak acid from Ka
289
calculation of pH for 10-7 mol/dm3 HCl
290
calculation of pH for multiprotic acids
291
definition of activity coefficient
292
definition of ionic strength
- xix -
3
3
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293
Debye-Hckel formula
ELECTRODE EQUILIBRIA
294
electromotive force (definition)
295
first kind electrodes
296
standard electrode potential
297
Nernst equation
298
second kind electrodes
299
relation between G and electromotive force
KINETICS OF HOMOGENEOUS REACTION
300
factors influencing reaction rate
301
rate equation
302
rate constant
303
order of reaction
304
1st order reactions: time dependence of concentration
305
- half life
306
- relation between half-life and rate constant
307
rate-determining step
308
molecularity
309
Arrhenius equation, activation energy (definition)
310
calculation of rate constant for first order reaction
311
calculation of rate constant for second, third order reaction
312
calculation of activation energy from experimental data
313
basic concepts of collision theory
314
basic concepts of transition state theory
315
opposing, parallel and consecutive reactions
THERMODYNAMICS
316
system and its surroundings
317
energy, heat and work
318
relation between enthalpy and energy
319
heat capacity - definition
320
difference between Cp and Cv
321
Hess law
322
Born-Haber cycle for ionic compounds
323
lattice energies - approximate calculation (e.g. Kapustinski equation)
324
use of standard formation enthalpies
325
heats of solution and solvation
326
bond energies - definition and uses
SECOND LAW
327
entropy - definition (q/T)
328
entropy and disorder
329
relation S=k ln W
330
relation G = H - T S
331
G and directionality of changes
PHASE SYSTEMS
332
ideal gas law
333
van der Waals gas law
334
definition of partial pressure
335
temperature dependence of the vapour pressure of liquid
336
Clausius-Clapeyron equation
337
reading phase diagram: triple point
- xxi -
1
1
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338
339
340
- critical temperature
liquid-vapour system (diagram)
- ideal and non ideal systems
3
3
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341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
OTHER PROBLEMS
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
351
using pipet
352
using buret
353
choice of indicators for acidimetry
354
titration curve: pH (strong and weak acid)
355
- EMF (redox titration)
356
calculation of pH of simple buffer solution
357
identification of: Ag+, Ba2+, Cl-, SO42- ions
358
- of Al3+ , NO2-, NO3-, Bi3+ ions
359
- of VO3-, ClO3-, Ti4+ ions
360
- using flame test for K, Ca, Sr
361
Beer-Lambert law
COMPLEXES
362
writing down complexation reactions
363
complex formation constants (definition)
364
Eg and T2g terms: high and low spin octahedral complexes
365
calculation of solubility of AgCl in NH3 (from Ks and betas)
366
cis and trans forms
THEORETICAL CHEMISTRY
367
n, l, m quantum numbers
368
energy levels of hydrogen atom (formula)
369
shape of p-orbitals
370
d orbital stereoconfiguration
371
molecular orbital diagram: H2 molecule
372
molecular orbital diagram: N2 or O2 molecule
373
bond orders in O2 or O2+ or O2374
Hckel theory for aromatic compounds
375
Lewis acids and bases
376
hard and soft Lewis acids
377
unpaired electrons and paramagnetism
378
square of the wave function and probability
379
understanding the simplest Schroedinger equation
- xxiii -
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PROBLEM 1
A gold single crystal has a cubic shape and the dimension of the cube is a = 1.000 cm . When
irradiated with Cu K1 X-rays ( = 154. 05 pm ) at the angle () of 10.89o it gives a well-defined
first-order diffraction pattern. The atomic weight of Au is M Au = 196.97 g mol1 .
a)
b)
c)
PROBLEM 2
A gold thin film is deposited on a square piece of mica having the dimension of a = 1.000 cm .
The gold film forms an ideal (100) surface structure. Such prepared gold layer and a gold wire
are immersed in 10.000 cm3 of aqueous electrolyte containing CuSO4 and Na2 SO4 ; the molar
concentrations of the salts are cCuSO 4 = 0.100 mM and cNa 2 SO4 = 0.100 M , respectively. A
constant potential is applied between the two electrodes; the gold (100) layer acts as a cathode
and the gold wire as an anode. An epitaxial layer of Cu having 100 atomic monolayers is
deposited on the Au(100) substrate. Gold has the face centered cubic (fcc) crystallographic
structure and its lattice constant equals 4.077 108 cm .
What is the concentration of CuSO4 in the electrolyte after deposition of the Cu epitaxial layer?
PROBLEM 3
Pure zinc is in contact with well oxygenated ( PO 2 = 1. 000 atm ) aqueous solution containing HCl
and ZnCl2 ; the concentrations of HCl and ZnCl2 are cHCl = 1. 000 M and cZnCl 2 = 1.000 M ,
respectively, and the temperature of the electrolyte is 25. 00 o C . The dissolution of Zn in this
solution is represented by the equation given below. A table of standard reduction potentials will
be required for this question.
Zn + 2HCl +
1
O ZnCl 2 + H2 O
2 2
a)
b)
If Zn does dissolve in this solution, when will the process cease in a spontaneous manner?
What is the concentration of the cations ( Cu2+ and Zn2+ ) in the respective compartments
after the discharge?
b)
What is the change of the potential (voltage) of the cell caused by the discharge?
PROBLEM 6
-D-(+)-Mannopyranose is an epimer of -D-(+)-glucopyranose.
Draw its structure in its most stable chair conformation.
Give the products of the reaction of -D-(+)-mannopyranose with the following reagents:
a)
b)
c)
HNO3
d)
e)
1) NaBH4 2) H2O
g)
5 HIO4
h)
i)
3 moles of phenylhydrazine, H+
j)
k)
PROBLEM 7
D-Aldotetrose A when reacted with nitric acid gives an optically inactive compound. This same
aldotetrose when treated with HCN followed by aqueous Ba(OH)2 gives two epimeric aldonic
acids B and C. These aldonic acids are in equilibrium with their respective -aldonolactones D
and E. Treatment of this mixture with Na-Hg and water at pH 3-5 gives F and G, respectively.
Nitric acid oxidation of F gives an optically inactive aldaric acid H while the same reaction with
E gives an optically active aldaric acid I.
Give structures for compounds A-I.
PROBLEM 8
A disaccharide A (C12H22O12) gives a negative test with Benedicts solution and does not
mutarotate. A is hydrolyzed by -glucosidases but not by -glucosidases. Methylation of A
followed by hydrolysis yields two molar equivalents of 2,3,4,6-tetra-O-methyl-D-glucose.
a)
b)
c)
How many moles of methanal (formaldehyde) and how many moles of methanoic
(formic) acid are formed in the reaction of A with periodic acid?
PROBLEM 9
D-Idose has the opposite configuration of D-glucose at C-2, C-3, and C-4.
D-idose, at equilibrium, exists in both pyranose (75%) and furanose forms (25%).
Draw both cyclohexane conformations for the and anomers of D-idopyranose. Which
of the two anomers do you believe to be the most stable? Why?
b)
D-Idose can isomerize, via the Lobry de Bruyn Alberda van Ekenstein transformation,
to a 2-ketose (D-sorbose). Draw a furanose form of D-sorbose.
c)
When heated D-idose undergoes a reversible loss of water and exists primarily as 1,6anhydro-D-idopyranose. For which anomer will this reaction be favored? Draw this
compound. Explain why this reaction will not occur with glucose.
PROBLEM 10
Disaccharide A is hydrolyzed by dilute acid to a mixture of D-glucose and D-galactose.
Compound A is a reducing sugar and is oxidized by bromine water to an acid, B, which is
methylated by sodium hydroxide and dimethylsulfate to yield an octa-O-methylated compound.
Hydrolysis of the latter gives a tetra-O-methylgluconic acid C, and a tetra-O-methylgalactose D.
Compound C is oxidized by nitric acid to tetra-O-methylglucaric acid. Compound C is also
obtained by the acidic hydrolysis of methyl 2,3,4,6-tetra-O-methylgalactopyranoside. Compound
A is hydrolyzed by an -galactosidase isolated from almonds.
Give structures for A, B, C and D.
PROBLEM 11
The ester functionality is very commonly found in organic compounds. Chemists have devised a
number of methods to prepare this important functional group. Several of these (shown below)
are mechanistically related and all involve nucleophilic acyl substitutions.
O
O
+
H3C C O C CH 3 + CH 3OH/H
CH3CONH 2 + CH 3OH/H
CH3CO2H + CH 3OH/H
CH 3CO 2CH3
CH 3CN + CH 3OH/H
CH 3COCl + CH 3OH/pyridine
O
H3C
1) NaHCO 3
C
OH
2) CH 3I
O
H3C
OCH 3
CH2N2
H3C
OH
(diazomethane)
PROBLEM 12
When 1 mol of semicarbazide (A) is added to 1 mol of cyclohexanone (B) and 1 mol of furfural
(C) in ethanol with a trace of acid, a mixture of semicarbazones (D and E) is obtained. If the
reaction is stopped after 5 minutes, the mixture contains mainly the semicarbazone D. However,
when the reaction is run overnight, the product obtained is almost quantitatively the
semicarbazone E. Explain these results and use energy diagrams to support your answer.
NHCONH 2
NHCONH 2
O
O
N
N
O
O
C
C
O
C
H
H2N-NH
NH 2
H
PROBLEM 13
Give the structures for the compounds A - E formed in the following synthetic sequence.
HBr
HO
OH
A
(C 3H6Br2)
CH2(COOEt) 2 (1 eq)
B
LiAlH4
NaOEt (2 eq)
HBr
CH2(COOEt) 2 (1 eq)
1) NaOH
(C 8H12O2) F
E
+
2) H 3O ,
NaOEt (2 eq)
D
(C 6H10Br2)
CH3COCH2CH2COCH(CH3)2
glyoxal
6-methylheptane-2,5-dione
a)
b)
c)
d)
PROBLEM 15
Two useful precursors (D and E) for the synthesis of a type of Nylon are prepared from
tetrahydrofuran (A).
H2/Ni
HCl
KCN
B
C
H3O+
Give the reaction mechanisms for this synthetic sequence and the structure of the compounds B E.
Cl
Cl
H
A
Cl
C
PROBLEM 17
Consider the reactions of 2-bromopropane and 2-methyl-2-bromopropane with sodium ethoxide
in ethanol. Which bromide would give the highest yield of alkene? Which bromide would give
the highest yield of alkene on solvolysis in 60% aqueous ethanol? Explain your reasoning and
write equations for all reactions involved clearly showing the possible reaction products.
Which of the two systems, sodium ethoxide or 60% aqueous ethanol, would give the higher yield
of alkene?
PROBLEM 18
The reaction shown below is interesting from a mechanistic standpoint.
a)
Suggest how this reaction takes place by writing the sequence of steps involved.
b)
What products would you expect if you replaced the starting material with
1,4-dimethylbenzene?
H3C
H3C
CH3
H3C
CH3
H2SO 4
+
CH3
(CH 3) 3C-OH
CH3
CH3
PROBLEM 19
The compounds shown below were in five unlabelled bottles. A set of simple qualitative
functional group tests were carried out on the contents of five bottles. Based on the following
experimental observations, assign the correct letters to the structures shown.
H3CCH2
C
HO
C
H3C
C
H3C
H
C
OH
H
C
i)
One millilitre of acetone was placed into a series of small test tubes. Approximately 1020 mg of each of the compounds to be tested was added to each tube and then one drop of
a chromic-sulfuric acid reagent was added and the tube gently shaken to mix the contents.
After a few minutes, samples containing A and C reacted with the orange dichromate
solution to turn the solution blue-green and a precipitate was visible. To confirm the bluegreen colour of the precipitate, the supernatant was carefully decanted and a few
milliliters of water was added to the test tube. The precipitate was rinsed twice in this
manner until the colour of the precipitate was apparent.
ii)
When experiment (i) was repeated using 1 drop of 0.2% KMnO4 solution instead of the
chromic-sulfuric acid reagent, again a colour change occurred and a precipitate was
observed to form for only compounds A and C.
iv)
Only compounds A and E produced a bright yellow precipitate when added to a solution
of sodium hypoiodite prepared by dissolving iodine in aqueous sodium hydroxide.
v)
PROBLEM 20
There are six constitutional isomers of C5H8 which are cyclic alkenes which do not contain an
ethyl group.
a)
b)
You are now given samples of three of the above compounds in bottles labeled A, B, and
C, but you do not know which compound is in which bottle. Based on the results of the
following reactions with KMnO4, give the structures of compounds A - F.
Compound A formed a dicarboxylic acid (D) which contained a chiral carbon atom.
Compound B formed a diketone (E) which did not contain any chiral carbon atoms.
Compound C formed F which contained both a carboxylic acid and a ketone functional
group and also had a chiral carbon atom.
b)
When enantiomerically pure (S)-2-butanol is treated with a strong base such as LiNH2
and then recovered, it retains its optical activity. However, when (S)-2-butanol is treated
with warm water in the presence of a small amount of sulfuric acid, it is found that the
recovered alcohol has lost its optical activity.
c)
Reaction of cyclobutene with bromine (Br2, cold, in the dark) yields a racemic product,
whereas the reaction with heavy hydrogen in the presence of a platinum catalyst (i.e. D2
with Pt) yields a meso compound.
d)
e)
f)
H3C
CH3
CH3
Br
H
10
CH3
NaOCH 3
CH3
[2]
CH3OH,
CH3
PROBLEM 24
At the dentist, the inorganic chemist is mostly interested by the composition of the visible part of
the teeth, namely the dental crown. Dental crown is made of two constituents: the enamel and
the dentine. The enamel is the hard, white substance that covers the crown. This part is made of
97 to 99% hydroxyapatite, Ca5(PO4)3OH. The crystals of this mineral are rather thin and long
over the whole thickness of the enamel, which is about 2 mm. The dentine (or the ivory of the
teeth) is the inside part of the crown and the roots. It is made of 20% organic matter, 10% water
and 70% hydroxyapatite. The crystals of the latter are shorter than those contained in the enamel.
They have the form of needles, or plates, that are attached to each other in the organic matrix.
11
a)
Write the balanced equation describing the mineralization and demineralization of tooth
enamel in water.
Dental cavities, or the direct attack of dentine by organic acids and bacteria, is initiated by the
demineralization process. The major cause of this process is the presence of dental plaque. The
latter is a gelatinous mass of closely-packed microorganisms and polysaccharides attached to the
tooth surface and maintained by the food particles that remain in the mouth. Improper dental
hygiene will make the dental plaque thicker and it will become a good medium in which bacteria
may grow. Under the plaque, near the enamel, anaerobic bacteria will decompose carbohydrates
into organic acids such as acetic and lactic acids.
b)
The natural lactic acid is levorotatory and possesses an R-configuration according to the
Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules. Draw a three-dimensional structure of lactic acid and give a
systematic name of this acid.
The pH of the dental plaque can be significantly reduced by presence of acetic and lactic acids. If
it goes below the critical value of pH 5.6 for a long period of time, an important demineralization
process can occur and dental cavities will appear.
c)
It is known that fluoride ions ensure a better protection for teeth. Two mechanisms are proposed
to explain this phenomenon. First of all, fluoride ions can inhibit the action of some enzymes
such as those involved in the fermentation of the carbohydrates that produce the harmful organic
acids. However, the major effect of the fluoride ions against the demineralization process is
believed to occur during this process itself. Because their sizes
12
Write the balanced equation for the reaction describing the decomposition and
recomposition of fluoroapatite in water. Calculate the solubilities of hydroxyapatite and
fluoroapatite in water.
(Ksp of hydroxyapatite = 6.8 x 10-37 and Ksp of fluoroapatite = 1.0 x 10-60)
e)
Show, from the proper chemical and mathematical equations, how the remineralization
process is favoured when hydroxyapatite is in the presence of fluoride ions.
Actually, all the hydroxide ions of the enamel are not substituted by fluoride ions. To ensure
sufficient protection, the substitution does not need to be complete. Studies have demonstrated
that a 30% ratio of substitution is enough to make the tooth enamel stable against acid attack. It
is then important to keep a constant concentration of fluoride ions in the mouth to favour the
formation of fluoridated hydroxyapatite.
f)
Show, from the proper chemical and mathematical equations, how fluoroapatite can be
more stable than hydroxyapatite in acidic medium?
(Kw = 1.0 x 10-14 and Ka of HF = 7.2 x 10-4)
PROBLEM 25
Some natural substances are very important for industry. From them we can often do a series of
simple reactions that will produce many new compounds that will each have many applications.
In the present problem, we will follow the transformation of one of these substances that had a
place of choice in Canadas economy, especially that of the Shawinigan area of Qubec, at the
beginning of the 20th century.
A mineral substance A is pyrolyzed at 825 C in an electrical furnace. A gas B evolves until the
mass of the remaining residue becomes equal to 56% of the initial mass. The reaction of C with
coal, coke or coal tar at 2000-2200 C forms compound D and a gas E. The latter contains the
same element as gas B, but in a different proportion. Initially, the purpose of this reaction was to
isolate the metal contained in C, but instead compound D was obtained. This material is of
major importance in industrial organic and mineral chemistry. Impure, it looks like a darkcoloured mass containing about 80% of D. Purified, it is a colourless ionic solid having the same
crystal structure as NaCl, but it is slightly distorted at room temperature.
13
14
a)
b)
Draw the two possible Lewis structures for compound I and specify the one that is
actually observed knowing that its infrared spectrum shows an absorption band between
2260 and 2220 cm-1, and that it does not possess a center of symmetry.
c)
d)
The crystal structure of D is formed by a lattice of cations in which the anions are
inserted. Assuming that all the sides of the unit cell are of same dimension and knowing
that the density of D is 2.22 g/cm3, calculate the distance between two cations on one
edge of the unit cell.
e)
Write the balanced chemical equations of all the reactions described in this problem.
SiC + 2CO
In the mid-1970s, Yajima and coworkers developed a process for the formation of silicon
carbide ceramics by the thermal conversion of a low molecular weight poly(dimethylsilane) or
[(CH3)2Si]n. The proximity between carbon and silicon atoms in the polymer favours the
formation of Si-C bonds and allows the production of silicon carbide in three simple pyrolysis
steps as shown below. This process has been adapted for the commercial production of
Nikalon SiC fibers.
15
450 C
n
CH3
1) 350 C, air
Si CH 2 n
2) 1300 C, N2
H
Ar
nSiC + nCH 4 + nH 2
The poly(dimethylsilane) used by Yajima has a relatively low solubility. The first step of his
process was mostly to transform it into a material that is more soluble so that it can be easily
processed. A great improvement of his process would be to start with a polymer that is already
soluble so that the first pyrolysis step can be avoided. West and coworkers were able to produce
such a polymer by substituting a methyl group with a phenyl group to get a
poly(methylphenylsilane) or [(CH3)(C6H5)Si]n. From this material, silicon carbide was obtained
after an ultraviolet treatment to cross-link the polymer, then a pyrolysis under vacuum at
temperatures above 800 C.
West Process:
CH3
Si
UV
vacuum
nSiC + nC6H6 + nH 2
The polymers used by Yajima and West are produced by Wurtz coupling reactions where the
starting dichlorosilanes react with an active metal such as sodium in refluxing, inert solvents like
toluene or xylene. These drastic experimental conditions allow the formation of a range of
polymers having relatively high molecular weights.
A new catalytic process has been developed by Harrod and coworkers, then adapted by other
teams around the world. The molecular weight of the polysilanes obtained were generally lower
(n = ca. 170) than those resulting from the Wurtz reactions (n > 1000). One of these polymers,
poly(methylsilane) or [(CH3)(H)Si]n, possesses only one carbon atom bound to each silicon atom
in the chain. The formation of SiC by the pyrolysis of poly(methylsilane) is shown below.
16
nSiC + nH 2
H
a)
Evaluate the theoretical ceramic yield (i.e. the mass percentage of SiC formed as a
function of the initial mass of reagents) for each of the processes described above.
Both silicon carbide and diamond can crystallize in a cubic structure (the other possibility being a
hexagonal structure). In silicon carbide, the carbon atoms occupy the points of a face-centered
cubic lattice (fcc) and the silicon atoms occupy half of the tetrahedral holes available. In
diamond, the same tetrahedral holes are occupied by other carbon atoms. Because of the sizes of
carbon and silicon atoms, these two structures are not close-packed. The density of silicon
carbide is 3.21 g cm-3 and that of diamond is 3.51 g cm-3.
b)
Knowing that the shortest possible distance between two neighbouring carbon atoms is
1.54 x 10-8 cm in diamond, calculate the atomic radius of silicon in SiC.
PROBLEM 27
The following are some facts about a set of important p-group oxides.
i)
ii)
iii)
Silica can be fused with potassium oxide to give potassium silicate, but the reaction is not
violent.
Both phosphorus pentoxide and sulfur trioxide react violently and
exothermically with molten potassium oxide.
iv)
Living systems use the pyrophosphate linkage (P-O-P) for energy storage in the form of
adenosine triphosphate (ATP), but the pyrosilicate (Si-O-Si) and pyrosulfate (S-O-S)
linkages have not been encountered in living systems.
17
b)
Write equations for all of the reactions mentioned in (ii) and (iii) and comment on the
energetics of each reaction.
c)
PROBLEM 28
The following is a description of the synthesis of a high Tc superconductor: The samples were
prepared from mixtures of high purity Y2O3, BaCO3 and CuO powders. After grinding and
pressing into a disc, materials were pre-fired at 850 C in air for 12 hours. Then, they were
broken, ground, pressed into disks and sintered in a stream of oxygen at 940 C for 12 hours.
The samples were then allowed to cool slowly to room temperature under oxygen. The final
product of this reaction has an idealized formula YBa2Cu3O7.
a)
b)
Given that neither Y nor Ba can change their oxidation state in this reaction, what is the
average oxidation state of the Cu in the product?
When YBa2Cu3O7 is heated above 400 C it begins to lose oxygen. A 10.00 g sample heated to
500 C under a stream of inert gas for 24 hours was found to weigh 9.88 g.
c)
What is the molecular formula for the product and what is the average oxidation state of
the Cu?
d)
Explain the numbers you get for the Cu oxidation states in YBa2Cu3O7 and in its thermal
decomposition product?
PROBLEM 29
Nitric oxide (NO) is a simple molecule that has been known for a very long time and extensively
studied. It recently aroused enormous new interest when it was discovered that this highly
reactive, simple molecule plays a key role as a neurotransmitter in a wide range of biochemical
systems. As with all biologically active chemical species a number of important questions
immediately arise: How is the molecule made? Is it stored or made on demand?
18
Superoxide ion, O2-, reacts rapidly with NO in water under physiological conditions to
give the peroxonitrite ion, [ONO2]-.
ii)
The peroxonitrite ion reacts rapidly with aqueous CO2, or HCO3-, to a give a species
believed to be [ONO2CO2]-.
iii)
Enzymes, called nitrite reductases and which contain Cu+ ions in the active site, effect the
reduction of NO2- to NO.
iv)
a)
Identify those chemical species mentioned in (i) and (ii) which possess an odd number of
valence electrons. Suggest structures for [ONO2]- and [ONO2CO2]-, indicating the
geometry about the N and C atoms.
b)
To what classes of reaction do the reactions described in (i) and (ii) belong?
c)
Write a balanced equation for the reduction of NO2- with Cu+ in aqueous acid solution.
d)
If one of the products in (iv) is N2O, what is the other product? How does the formation
of these two products explain the experimental observations? To what class of reaction
does this reaction belong?
19
Werner was able to deduce many things about the geometry of coordination compounds
from the existence, or non-existence of isomers. Name, draw the structures of, and
discuss the isomerism of the following coordination compounds:
[(NH3)4Cl2Cr]Cl
[py3Cl3Co]; where py = pyridine
[(H2O)5(CNS)Co]Cl
[(Me3P)3ClPt]Br; where Me = CH3
c)
d)
CrCl3 can form a series of compounds with NH3 having the general formula
[(NH3)xCl3Cr] (x= 3 to 6). How did Werner use a new theory that explained the
electrical conductivity of salts in water to show that in all of these compounds the number
of groups (NH3 or Cl) attached to Cr is always 6?
20
c)
Define thermodynamically the entropy S and state what kind of process is necessary to
calculate it.
3
For a perfect gas, E= (nRT) and PV=nRT. Use this information to calculate the change
2
in the thermodynamic functions, E, S, G for a reversible isothermal expansion from an
initial volume V to a final volume 2V at a temperature T.
d)
e)
From the above results, define spontaneity or irreversibility in terms of the sign of S and
G.
f)
What is the change of entropy of the surroundings in the reversible expansion mentioned
above?
g)
21
The one mole of O2(g), now at 90K and 1 atm pressure, is liquified by application of a
pressure infinitesimally greater than 1 atm. The liquid O2 is then cooled at constant
pressure to the normal melting point of 55K, solidified reversibly, and the solid cooled to
10K. Determine Hsys and Ssys for the sum of these events.
Cp (l) = 54 JK-1 mol-1, Cp (s) = 41 JK-1 mol-1, Hvap = 6.82 KJ mol-1, Hfus = 0.42 KJ mol-1
PROBLEM 33
Some standard enthalpies of formation and standard third law entropies (all at 298K) are:
Hf (kJ mol-1)
CO2 (aq)
-412.9
S (JK-1 mol-1)
121.0
H2O(l)
-285.8
69.9
NH3(aq)
-80.8
(H2N)2C=O(aq)
-317.7
110.0
176.0
b)
Determine whether or not the hydrolysis of urea will proceed spontaneously at 298K
under the following conditions:
[(H2N)2C=O] = 1.0 M; [H2O] = 55.5 M; [CO2] = 0.1 M; [NH3] = 0.01 M
22
O3
k-1
O3 + O
k2
2O2
where the second step is assumed to be much slower than the first (equilibrium) step.
a)
On the basis of this mechanism, and using the principle of stationary (steady) state for
[O], derive the rate equation for the decomposition of O3. Show that this mechanism is
consistent with the observed kinetic behaviour at both high and low values of [O2]/[O3].
b)
Evaluate kexp and k'exp in terms of k1, k-1 and k2 for the proposed mechanism.
23
[X]0 (M)
0.01
0.02
0.02
0.02
[Y]0 (M)
0.01
0.02
0.02
0.01
[Z]0 (M)
0.01
0.01
0.04
0.04
Initial Rate
d[P]
(M h-1)
dt
0.002
0.008
0.016
0.016
a)
b)
Determine the rate constant and the time it will take for one half of X to be consumed in a
reaction mixture that has the initial concentrations:
[X] = 0.01 M
[Y] = 1.00 M
[Z] = 2.00 M
PROBLEM 36
Molecular Orbital (MO) Theory was introduced by Mulliken in the 1940s and 1950s for which
he won the 1964 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. It allows for the prediction of bond orders and
paramagnetism of simple molecules.
24
a)
Give a relative energy diagram for the MOs of diatomic molecules which possess only
1s, 2s and 2p electrons.
b)
Give the MO configurations and bond orders of H2, H2-, He2, and He2-.
c)
d)
e)
In analytical chemistry the Hg2+ ion is identified by reduction to Hg+. However, the
actual structure of the latter as determined from X-ray analysis is found to be the
CH
CH2
CH3
H3C
CH2CH3
N
N
Mg
H3C
N
CH3
H
H H
CH3OOC
O
Chlorophyll
the total number are generally agreed to be either 18 or 22; either of which make the system
aromatic. Benzene and the core segment of chlorophyll are two planar species which
approximate a circular ring structure: a hexagon (6) for benzene and a dodecagon (12) for
chlorophyll. Each sp2 hybridized carbon and two of the nitrogen atoms supply one electron to
the rings in these systems. Thus in benzene there are 6- electrons, whereas in chlorophyll there
are 18 (or 22) -electrons. For the purposes of this question, assume that there are 18 aromatic
electrons in chlorophyll which pass through the aza nitrogens but leave out the pyrrole-type
nitrogens of the molecular core. Sigma () electrons are in the plane of the molecule and electrons are perpendicular to the plane of the molecule.
25
Mg
Mg
benzene
18 system
chlorophyll core
The energy of the molecular orbitals (MOs) of an electron confined to a ring of radius r is given
by:
h 2l 2
En =
l = 0, 1, 2, 3
2mr 2
h
(h = Plancks constant; 1 x 10-34 joules sec), m is the mass of the electron, and l is
2
the rotational quantum number of the electron (the equivalent of ml in an atom). As an
where h =
approximation, the C-C bond distance can be assumed to be 1.50 x 10-8 cm.
a)
Why does the magnesium not supply -valence electrons to the chlorophyll ring?
b)
What is the radius rb of the benzene ring and rc, that of the chlorophyll ring?
c)
Find an expression for the energy of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) of
each ring in terms of h , m, and rb. Similarly, find the expression for the energy of the
lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO).
26
d)
Find an expression for the lowest (i.e. first) absorption band of each ring. The
experimental absorptions occur at 300 nm for benzene and for 600 nm for chlorophyll.
Suggest an improvement of the ring model which will bring the theoretical and
experimental data more into agreement.
e)
Give the chemical equations for the reaction involved in this determination.
b)
Determine the amount of dissolved oxygen and report your results in ppm.
PROBLEM 39
For any analysis to achieve the desired level of accuracy, a calibration curve is usually prepared
using concentrations of the standard which covers a reasonable range of analyte concentrations in
a solution whose overall composition approximates that of the test solution. In real life, this is
very near impossible and most analysts tend to rely on a procedure called standard addition in
which a known quantity of the analyte is added to an aliquot of the sample.
27
b)
c)
What is the concentration of phosphate in the patients urine? (In mg/L of urine)
d)
PROBLEM 40
The complex between Co(II) and the ligand R was investigated spectrophotometrically. A green
filter at 550 nm was used for the measurements, the wavelength of absorbance maximum for the
complex. The cation concentration was maintained at 2.5 x 10-5 mol/L in solutions with
different concentrations of R. The absorbance data (1 cm cell) were obtained as follows:
Conc. R
(mol/L)
Absorbance (A)
x 10-5
___________
______________
1.50
0.106
3.25
0.232
4.75
0.339
6.25
0.441
7.75
0.500
9.50
0.523
11.5
0.529
12.5
0.531
16.5
0.529
20.0
0.530
28
b)
Calculate the value of the formation constant Kf for the complex using the stoichiometry
where the lines intersect.
PROBLEM 41
A certain quantity of lead chromate was accidentally spilled into a reservoir, and the city
engineers would like to know to what extent drinking water was contaminated. The solubility
product Ksp of lead chromate at 18 C is 1.77 x 10-14.
a)
b)
Some engineers believe that the lead in the water could be removed by treating it with
potassium chromate (K2CrO4). What is the solubility of lead chromate in 0.1 mol/L of
potassium chromate?
c)
It was also believed that chromate ions could be removed from potable water by treating
it with lead nitrate. What is the solubility of lead chromate in a 3.0 x 10-7 mol/L solution
of lead nitrate?
PROBLEM 42
A redox titration was made from a sample of steel ore to determine the amount of Fe2O3. The
titration used 0.500 g of ore in 100 mL of 0.5 M HCl to produce Fe2+. The solution was titrated
with 0.0592 M KMnO4 which converted the Fe2+ to Fe3+ while MnO4- goes to Mn2+. The
sample of steel ore required 7.49 mL of titrant.
Report the percent of Fe2O3 contained in the ore sample.
29
aluminum foil
disposable pipets
acetone
hotplate
100 mL beaker
30
iii)
Bromine Test:
Screen a test tube from light by using a piece of aluminum foil. Into it place a drop of the
compound to be tested, add two drops of the bromine test solution and gently shake the
test tube. Note any colour changes which occur within one minute.
iv)
Lucas Test:
Prepare a hot water bath using the 100 mL beaker and your hotplate before starting this
test. Place 25-30 drops of the Lucas reagent in a small test tube and add five drops of the
compound to be tested. Do not shake the test tube. Look for turbidity at the interface
between the two liquids which is an indication of a reaction. If there is no turbidity,
shake the test tube and place it in the hot water bath. Record any changes which you
observe within three minutes. (Note: Do not overheat; this can result in false
observations.)
PROBLEM 45 - EXPERIMENTAL
Determination of Lead Ions by Back Titration with EDTA
In a solution buffered at pH 10, Eriochrome Black T (Black T) is pink when bound to Mg2+ and
blue in the absence of available magnesium ions. Lead ions are not bound by Black T. EDTA
binds to Mg2+ and Pb2+ even in the presence of Black T. The stoichiometry of both EDTAmetal interactions is 1:1.
100 mL sample of lead solution
buffer solution, pH 10
Eriochrome Black T, indicator (Black T)
standard magnesium solution, (1.00 mg Mg2+/mL solution)
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) solution
31
ii)
32
10 mL buret
2 x 50 mL Erlenmeyer flasks
phenolphthalein
saturated solution of CaSO4
disposable pipets
10 mL graduated cylinder
spatula
1.00 mL pipet
1 M HCl
standardized NaOH (ca. 0.01M)
Charge the column by passing 5 mL of HCl through the column to load it with H+.
Remove the excess acid by rinsing with distilled water until the wash is neutral to litmus.
Do not allow the liquid level to fall below the surface of the resin.
Procedure
i)
Pipet 1 mL of saturated CaSO4 solution directly onto the column. Collect the eluent off
the column into an Erlenmeyer flask. Elute the column with five aliquots of distilled
water into the Erlenmeyer flask. Check the pH of a drop of the eluent. If acidic, elute the
column with another aliquot of water and test again. Repeat until the eluent is neutral.
ii)
Titrate the contents of the flask with the standardized NaOH using phenolphthalein as the
indicator.
33
PROBLEM 50 - EXPERIMENTAL
Synthesis and Identification of an Organic Compound
An unknown compound A has the empirical formula C4H2O3. It is possible to convert it into an
acid, B, with the empirical formula C2H3O2 using the procedure below. Synthesize B, determine
its molar mass, and identify A and B.
34
concentrated HCl
unknown compound A
Add 3.0 g of 20 or 40 mesh zinc to a 125 mL flask and cover the zinc with 25 mL of deionized
water. Heat the water to boiling. Remove the flask from the heat and carefully add a total of 5.0
g of A over a 5-10 minute period. Stir occasionally during the addition. Allow the flask to stand
for five minutes, stir occasionally. In a hood and with constant stirring, slowly add 10 mL of
concentrated HCl over a 10 minute period.
When all of the zinc has dissolved heat the solution until it is clear and then allow it to cool in an
ice bath to produce white crystals.
Suction filter the cold solution to obtain product B which can be recrystallized from water. Dry
and weigh the crystals.
Titrate product B with the standardized sodium hydroxide provided.
Complete the following table:
Yield B, g
mL NaOH / g B
Molecular weight B
Structure of B:
Structure of A:
35
1.000
22
23 = 1.476 10
6.777 10
Each crystallographic cell has four atoms, nu = 4 . The corner atoms belong to eight unit
cells, thus 1 / 8 of each corner atom belongs to the cell; the face atoms belong to two unit
cells, thus 1 / 2 of each face atom belongs to the cell.
nu = 8
1
1
+6 =4
8
2
36
b)
mAu =
MAu
196.97
=
= 3.271 1022 g
23
NA 6.002214 10
c)
The density of Au, thus the weight of the 1. 000 cm3 cube, equals the number of unit cells
within 1. 000 cm3 times the mass of the cell:
dAu = N M u = 1. 476 1022 1. 308 1021 = 19.31 g cm 3
SOLUTION 2
i)
Determination of the number of Au atoms within the 1. 000 cm long square having the
(100) surface structure.
The area of the Au(100) surface unit equals:
There are two Au atoms per surface unit cell; the atoms in the corners belong to four unit
cells, thus 1 / 4 of each corner atom belongs to the (100) surface unit cell, and the atom in
the middle of the cell belongs to the cell.
nu = 4
1
+1=2
4
37
iii)
NCu
1.203 1017
=
= 1. 999 107 mol
23
N A 6. 02214 10
Determination of the number of moles of CuSO4 in the electrolyte after deposition of the
epitaxial layer.
The number of moles of CuSO4 in the electrolyte after the deposition equals the initial
number of moles of CuSO4 minus the number of moles of Cu deposited on the Au(100)
substrate.
nCu = 1.000 104 10.000 103 1.999 107 = 8.001 107 mol
iv)
38
8. 001 107
= 0. 0800 mM
10. 000 103
R T cZn2 +
ln 2
nF
c H+
c 2+
R T cZn2 +
ln 2 = 1. 991 or when ln Zn2 = 155. 0 .
nF
c H+
c H+
c 2+
gives after rearrangement the following ratio: Zn2 = 2. 068 1067 .
cH +
E = 0. 000 V when
Based upon the above ratio, one may evaluate the concentrations of Zn2+ and H + when
the process ceases. The concentration of H + decreases twice as fast as the concentration
of Zn2+ increases. Thus the new concentration of Zn2+ and H + can be described through
the following equations:
39
where c Zn2 + is the increase of the concentration of Zn2+ caused by Zn dissolution and
c H + is the decrease of the concentration of H + . Bearing in mind that c Zn2 + = 2c H+ ,
one may rewrite the above equations as follows:
cZn2 + = 1. 000 + c Zn2 +
cH + = 1. 000 2 c Zn2+
1 + cZn 2 +
(1 2 c )
= 2.068 10
cZn2 +
c
2
H+
67
Zn 2 +
which leads to the following quadratic equation (for simplicity we introduce the
following coefficient a = 2.068 1067 ):
1 + cZn 2+ = a 1 4 c Zn 2+ + 4 c Zn 2+
or
2
4 a cZn
+ a 1= 0
2 + (4 a + 1) c
Zn 2 +
Bearing in mind the very large value of a ( a = 2.068 1067 ), thus remembering that
4 a + 1 4 a and that a 1 a , one may rewrite the above equation as follows:
4 a c 2Zn2 + 4 a cZn 2+ + a = 0
A solution of this quadratic equation leads to the following value of the increase of
concentration of Zn2+ : c Zn2 + = 0. 500 M . The respective concentrations of Zn2+ and H +
when the dissolution of Zn ceases are c Zn 2+ = 1.500 M and cH + = 0.000 M . Thus the
dissolution of Zn ceases when all HCl is consumed in the process.
40
E oNi2 + / Ni = 0. 257 V
E oCu2 + / Cu = 0.342 V
R T c Ni2 +
ln
2F
cCu2 +
After the CuCl2 addition, the new potential of the cell, E' , is expressed by the following
formula:
E' = Eo
R T c Ni2 +
ln '
cCu 2+
2F
where c'Cu 2+ is the new concentration of Cu2+ . The potential increase, E = E' E ,
associated with the CuCl2 addition may be determined on the basis of the above relations:
R T c'Cu2 +
E = E ' E =
ln
2F
cCu2 +
Thus, it is not necessary to know the Ni2+ concentration in order to relate the change of
the cell potential with the addition of CuCl2 .
The above relation allows one to determine the new concentration of Cu2+ :
41
The concentration change upon addition of CuCl2 equals c Cu2 + = 0. 010 M and the
respective number of moles of CuCl2 added to the solution is 1. 00 103 mol .
Finally, one may evaluate the mass of CuCl2 added which is:
m CuCl 2 = n CuCl 2 M CuCl 2 = 1.344 g .
SOLUTION 5
a)
The respective half-reactions and corresponding reduction potentials are:
Zn2 + + 2 e Zn
Cu2 + + 2 e Cu
E oZn2 + / Zn = 0.762 V
E oCu2 + / Cu = 0.342 V
Cu has a higher value of the reduction potential than Zn, thus Zn is the anode whereas Cu
is the cathode. The above cell may be represented by the following scheme:
Zn | Zn2 + (c Zn2 + ) || (c Cu2 + ) Cu2 + | Cu where || represents the salt bridge.
The standard potential of the cell is E o = 1.104 V.
The cell potential, E, prior to the galvanostatic discharge is expressed by the Nernst
equation:
E = Eo
R T cZn2 +
ln
2F
cCu2 +
Because the concentrations of the cations are the same in both compartments, the cell
potential equals the standard one, thus E = 1.104 V .
Galvanostatic discharge of the cell results in cathodic deposition of Cu and in anodic
dissolution of Zn causing the concentrations of the cations in the respective
42
The amount of the deposited Cu and that of the dissolved Zn are determined on the basis
of the Faraday law or on the basis of the reasoning presented below. The number of
moles of the deposited Cu, nCu , and of the dissolved Zn, nZn , equals:
nCu = nZn =
Q
1000
=
= 5.18 103 mol
2 e NA 2 e NA
The numbers of moles of Cu2+ and Zn2+ in the respective compartments after the
galvanostatic discharge are:
n'Cu 2+ = 1. 00 102 5.18 103 = 4.82 103 mol
n'Zn2 + = 1. 00 102 + 5.18 103 = 1.518 102 mol
The molar concentrations of Cu2+ and Zn2+ in the respective compartments of the cell
after the discharge are:
c'Cu 2+ = 4. 82 102 M
c'Zn2 + = 1.518 101 M
b)
The cell potential, E' , after the galvanostatic discharge is expressed by the formula:
R T c'Zn2+
R 298.15 0.1518
E' = E
ln '
= 1104
.
ln
= 1.089 V
2F
cCu 2+
2F
0. 0482
o
Finally, the potential change cased by the discharge of the cell equals:
E = E ' E = 0. 015 V
Montral Canada, July 1997
43
HOCH 2
HO
HO
HO
O
H
OH
b)
CO2H
CO2H
CO2
HO
c)
HO
H + Cu2O
HO
HO
OH
OH
CO2H
d)
e)
HOCH 2
HO
HO
HO
O
H
f)
H3COCH 2 H3CO
O
H3CO
H3CO
OCH 3
CH 2OH
HO
HO
OCH 3
OH
OH
CH 2OH
g)
h)
O
O
C
H
OH
5 equiv
i)
H
NNHC 6H5
AcO
NNHC 6H5
AcO
H
1 equiv
H
O
OAc
OH
OAc
OH
CH2OAc
44
HO
CH 2OH
j)
k)
O
HO
HO
OH
HO
HO
OH
HO
+ HO
CH2OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
CH 2OH
OH
CH2OH
SOLUTION 7
The only D-aldotetrose which will give an inactive product when oxidized with nitric acid is:
H
O
CO2H
HNO 3 H
OH
H
OH
OH
CH2OH
OH
CO2H
A
A gives B and C when treated with HCN followed by aqueous Ba(OH)2
CO2H
H
O
H
OH
1) HCN
OH
2) Ba(OH)
OH
OH
OH
CO2H
HO
+
OH
OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
CH2OH
45
The equilibrium mixture above when treated with Na-Hg and water at pH = 3-5 produces F
and G which when oxidized by nitric acid gives an inactive aldaric acid H and an optically
active aldaric acid I:
CO2H
O
H
OH
HO
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
H
H
CH2OH
F
CO 2H
HNO 3
HNO 3
CO 2H
CH 2OH
CO2H
HO
SOLUTION 8
Compound A is a non-reducing sugar with an -linkage at the anomeric carbon. Since A gives
only 2,3,4,6 methylated glucoses on hydrolysis the only possible structure for A is to have the
two glucose molecules dimerize via their respective anomeric carbons:
HO
HO
CH 2OH
O
H
OH
O
HO
O
OH
OH
CH 2OH
10 moles of HI are needed for the complete cleavage of A giving 10 moles of methanoic (formic)
acid and 2 moles of methanal (formaldehyde).
46
HO
CH2OH OH
CH 2OH
anomer
OH
O
HO
OH
OH
HO
CH2OH OH
OH
HO
-anomer
OH
O
OH
OH
HO
OH
HO
more stable conformer because
more equatorial substituents
O
OH H
CH2OH HOH 2C
O
OH H
OH
OH
CH2OH
H
OH
-anomer
H
OH
-anomer
c) The indicated conformer of the -anomer can cyclize internally to form the anhydroderivative. Glucose cannot undergo this reaction because it requires the C-6 substituent to be
axial, and this conformation is too unstable for the glucose molecule.
CH 2OH
OH
-H 2O
O
HO
OH
HO
CH2
O
O
HO
OH
HO
47
OH
OH
CH2OH
O
HO
H
A
Br2
OH
O
CH2
HO
HO
OH
-linkage cleaved by
-galactosidease to
glucose and galactose
CH2OH
O
HO
H
OH
O
CH2
HO
HO
OH
hemiacetal and thus
reducing sugar
OH
CO2H
OH
OCH 3
H3CO
OCH 3 +
OCH 3
CH2OH
C
H
O
H
OCH 3
H3CO
H3CO
OH
CH2OCH 3
D
HNO 3
CO2H
H
H3CO
OCH 3
H
OCH 3
OCH 3
CO2H
48
H3C
NaHCO 3
H3C
OH
H3C
C
O Na
O-H H2C N N
CH 2N2 = H2C N N
H3C
SN2
I
H3C
+ Na I
O-CH 3
O
O H3C N N
H2C N N
C
H
C
O-CH 3
3
SN2
+ N2
H2C N N
SOLUTION 12
The carbonyl group of cyclohexanone is more reactive (electrophilic) than the one of furfural
since the latter is stabilized by conjugation with the aromatic ring. Therefore, if the reaction is
quenched after a short period of time, the major product obtained is the one formed the most
rapidly, i.e. the kinetic controlled product D. However, the reaction is in equilibrium and after
enough time, the major compound formed is the most thermodynamically stable product, the
semicarbazone E. The situation is illustrated by the following energy diagram.
Energy
G for C >
G for B
D
C
E
Reaction Coordinate
49
HBr
HO
OH
Br
COOEt
Br
NaOEt (2 eq)
COOEt
LiAlH4
COOEt
CH2(COOEt)
COOEt
NaOEt (2 eq)
CH2Br
CH2Br
CH 2OH
HBr
C
CH 2OH
1) NaOH
+
2) H 3O ,
COOH
F
SOLUTION 14
a)
From the formula, the number of unsaturations can be determined: For a saturated
hydrocarbon there should be (10 x 2) + 2 = 22 hydrogens. Therefore (22-16)/2 H per
unsaturation implies that 3 unsaturations are present.
50
b)
The hydrogenation product still contains one site of unsaturation and thus there must have
been two double bonds present which underwent reduction.
c)
The hydrogenation product still contains one site of unsaturation and thus there must be
one ring present which did not undergo reduction.
CH3
CH3
H3C
1) O 3
2) Zn-H 2O
O
H3C
CH3
-terpinene
CH3
6-methylheptane-2,5-dione
glyoxal
SOLUTION 15
H
O
HCl
Cl
SN2
Cl
HO
HCl
CN
Cl
SN2
Cl
Cl
Cl
H2O
B
SN2
SN2
Cl
NC
CN
NC
C
CN
C
C
C N
H H
cat. hydrogenation
N
C N
H H
cat. hydrogenation
repeat of
H2N
NH 2
D
N
cat. hydrogenation
NH 2
51
H2O
H+
N
C N
N H
HO
N
-H
N H
O
N
N H
NH 2
H2O
NH 2
H2O
O
N
NH 2
O2H
O
N
NH 3
O
-NH 3
OH
OH
-H +
O
O
HO
C
O
52
repeat of
OH
OH
hydrolysis
H3C
NaOC 2H5
(CH 3) 3C-Br
H3C
NaOC 2H5
(CH 3) 2CH-Br
H
(exclusively)
C C
H
H3C
(CH 3) 2CH-OC 2H5 and some
H
C
C
H
aqueous
(CH 3) 2CH-OH + (CH 3) 2CH-OC 2H5
ethanol
The stronger the base, the higher the percentage of elimination and thus more elimination occurs
in sodium ethoxide. Elimination is also favoured over substitution on tertiary halides since the
double bond formed is more stable and the substitution site is more sterically hindered than in
secondary halides. In the case of aqueous ethanol, a mixture of alcohol and ether are obtained
since both water and ethanol can compete as nucleophiles.
53
H3C
CH3
H3C
CH3
(CH 3) 3C
+ (CH 3) 3CH
CH3
H3C
CH3
CH3
H3C
C
CH3
CH3
CH2 C
CH3
CH3
CH3
C
H
CH3
CH3
H3C
H3C
CH3
CH3
+ H+
CH3
54
SOLUTION 19
H3CCH2
HO
C
H3C
H3C
H
C
OH
i)
Chromate oxidation will identify readily oxidizable groups such as alcohols and
aldehydes and thus 4 and 5 must be A and C (although which is which cannot be
determined yet).
ii)
Permanganate oxidation will also identify readily oxidizable groups such as alcohols and
aldehydes in addition to alkenes (absent in this case). This test merely confirms the
tentative assignment of part (i).
iii)
Solubility in base and a positive litmus test implies an acidic group. The only acidic
system is the carboxylic acid 2 and thus this must be B.
iv)
The iodoform test will be positive for methyl ketones and for secondary methyl alcohols
(which are oxidized to methyl ketones by the reagent) and thus 3 and 4 must be A and E.
Since from (i) and (ii) above we know that 4 and 5 must be A and C, it follows that 5 is
C, 4 is A and thus 3 must be E. At this point only 1 is unassigned and thus must be D.
v)
The 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine is a test for aldehydes and ketones. Only 1, 3 and 5 will
react which serves to confirm the above carbonyl group assignments.
55
SOLUTION 20
CH3
H3C
CH3
H3C
H3C
CH3
CH3
CH3
CH3
CH3
H3C
O
E
CH3
H3C
O
F
OH
HO
C C
OH
O O
D
SOLUTION 21
a)
Both reactions are SN2 displacements at primary carbon atoms. The SN2 reaction is
primarily controlled by steric interactions. 1-Bromo-2-methylbutane is branched at the position which hinders the attack of the thiolate nucleophile, whereas the 1-bromobutane
is relatively open to the displacement and thus reacts more rapidly.
b)
56
The first reaction involves deprotonation/protonation and effects only the O-H bond and
not the configuration of the chiral centre. Thus there is no loss of optical activity. The
second reaction involves the C-O bond of the chiral centre and proceeds via the formation
of a carbocation which is a planar species. Addition of water to the carbocation may
occur equally from either side leading to formation of racemic recovered alcohol and thus
loss of optical activity.
OH
H C CH
3
H3CH2C
optically
active
LiNH2
O Li
H2O
H C CH
3
H3CH2C
optically
active
OH
H C CH + LiOH
3
H3CH2C
optically
active
H+
H2O
C
H
CH3
H3CH2C
optically
active
c)
OH
+ H 2O
C CH3
OH
+
H
H3CH2C
not optically
active
H C CH H C C H
3
3
H3CH2C
CH2CH3
racemic
Bromine addition follows an anti process to lead to a trans product. The initial
bromonium ion can be formed equally on the top or bottom face of the cyclobutene to
form the identical species. Opening of this intermediate at either end of the former
double bond by the bromide ion leads an equal mixture of the (R,R)- and (S,S)- products,
i.e. a racemate, which is optically inactive. Hydrogen addition (involving any of the
isotopes) follows a syn process to lead to a cis product. The addition may again take
place with equal ease from the top or the bottom face of the cyclobutene but this time
both products are the identical meso compound. The product is also optically inactive.
H
Br
Br
H
H
H
Br
Br
D2/Pt
H
Br
H
D R,S D
meso
H S,S Br
equal amounts
Br
H
R,R H
H S,R H
57
High concentration of the nucleophile (HO-) favours the SN2 reaction which proceeds
with 100% inversion of configuration at the displaced centre.
e)
Low concentration of the nucleophile (HO-) favours the SN1 process which proceeds via
a carbocation. This planar intermediate can be trapped by the solvent or the nucleophile
from either side leading to racemization. Under a given set of conditions, the rate of an
SN1 reaction is directly dependent only on the concentration of the alkyl halide. Thus
doubling the alkyl halide concentration will double the rate of formation of the alcohol.
Doubling the concentration of the nucleophile (HO-) will have no effect on the rate of the
reaction.
f)
Reaction [1] is an SN2 reaction in which the nucleophile (CH3O-) displaces the bromide
anion with inversion of configuration. Elimination is not possible because the bromine
and the lone hydrogen on the adjacent carbon atom cannot assume the necessary antiperiplanar conformation; i.e. both cannot be axial.
Reaction [2] is an E2 elimination process which occurs readily because a ring flip of the
conformer shown will produce the anti-periplanar arrangement of the hydrogen and the
bromine.
58
SN2
Br
H
CH3O
Br
CH3
CH3
CH3
Br
H
CH3
H3C
[1]
OCH 3
CH3
H3C
Br
E2
CH3
[2]
Br
CH3
CH3OH
H3CO
SOLUTION 22
H3C
OH
CH 3SO 2Cl
Br
OSO 2CH 3
Et 3N
H3C
H3C
H3C
SN2
Br
B
a mesylate
CH 3
H3C
H3C
OH
F
C
trans
Br
Br
D
cis
59
SOLUTION 23
H3C
H3C
CH3
H3C
H
HO
CH3
H3C
OH
CH3
HO
H
H3C
OH
HO
O O
B
CH3
H3C
CH3
CH3
H
C OH
I/J
H3C
H3C
CH3
CH3
O O
E
HO
H3C
Cl
OH
H3C
CH3
Cl
H
HO
O
D
CH2Cl
H
O O
OH
O O
HO
OH
HO
G/H
O O
OH
SOLUTION 24
a)
Ca 5(PO 4) 3OH (s)
b)
H2O (l)
OH
CH3
OH
CO2H
CO2H
H
OH
CH3
H
H3C
CO2H
(Fischer)
60
c)
(2R)-(l)-2-hydroxypropanoic acid
(R)-(-)-2-hydroxypropanoic acid
(R)-(l)-2-hydroxypropanoic acid
(2R)-(-)-lactic acid
(2R)-(l)-lactic acid
(R)-(-)-lactic acid
(R)-(l)-lactic acid
H 2O (l)
K w-1
PO 43- (aq) + H +
K a3 -1
d)
H2O (l)
Ca 5(PO 4) 3F (s)
61
In order to show how the remineralization process is preferred in presence of F- ions, one
must evaluate the equilibrium constant of the reaction of hydroxyapatite with F-. This
reaction can be described as the sum of the following reactions:
Ca 5(PO 4) 3OH (s)
Ca 5(PO 4) 3F (s)
Ca 5(PO 4) 3F (s) + HO -
Ksp (hydr)
Ksp (fluor) -1
K
62
H 2O (l)
Ksp (hydr)
Kw-1
K1
HF (aq)
Ksp (fluor)
Ka (HF) -1
Since the equilibrium constant K2 is smaller, the reaction of hydroxyapatite with H+ ions
is preferred relative to the reaction of fluoroapatite with H+ ions.
SOLUTION 25
The best way to start this problem is to write the chemical equations including the unknowns in
order to represent the different steps with their details.
825 C
A (s)
(g) + C (s)
44% of the 56% of the
mass of A mass of A
[1]
63
2000-2200 C
C (s)
Carbon (s)
D (s)
E (g)
[2]
Gas E contains the same elements as gas B, but in different proportions. Some possibilities are:
NO, NO2, N2O, NO3, CO, CO2, SO2, and SO3. It can not be a pure gaseous element since gases
B and E contains the same elements. Hydrogen halides (HX) must also be excluded since no
other gases with H and X can be formed with other proportions. Large evolutions of nitrogen- or
sulfur-based gases are rarely observed during the pyrolysis of minerals. Moreover, the
temperature of reaction [1] can correspond to that of a calcification with CO2 gas evolution (B).
The original purpose of reaction [2] was to isolate the metal in C according to reaction [3] below
(where C would be a metallic oxide), but products D and E were obtained instead. Gas E could
be carbon monoxide, CO. In reaction [2], the metal must be in D since E is a gas.
MxOy (s)
D (s)
H2O (l)
y C (s)
x M(s)
F (g)
y CO (g)
[3]
G (s)
[4]
G (s)
64
C (s)
H2O (l)
[5]
B (g)
H2O (l)
A' (s)
[6]
The composition of A' is exactly the same as that of the mineral substance A. If B is CO2 then A
(or A') must be a carbonate, which is possible for a mineral substance. Compound A' could be
calcium carbonate which is the most common natural carbonate. Compound G, containing at
least one OH- ion, can be calcium hydroxide, which has a relatively low solubility.
1000 -1100 C
D (s)
N2 (g)
H (s)
Carbon (s)
[7]
Compound H is ionic and very reactive. It contains 15%C and 35%N, the remaining material
being the metal. So, the anionic part is made of carbon and nitrogen.
Assume 100 g of compound H:
(CN2)nx-
If the formula of the anion is CN2 and that of compound H is MCN2, then 50 g of the metal is
equivalent to 1.25 mol of this metal. The molar mass of the latter would then be 40 g and it
would be calcium. This is highly probable taking into account the information deduced already.
If the formula of the anion is (CN2)2 or C2N4 and that of compound H is MC2N4, then 50 g of
the metal is equivalent to 0.625 mol of this metal. The molar mass would be 80 g but there is no
metal having such a molar mass.
If the formula of the anion is (CN2)3 or C3N6 and that of compound H is MC6N6 then 50 g of the
metal is equivalent to 0.417 mol of this metal. The molar mass of the latter would be of 120 g
which could be a heavy metal like tin or lead. However, these metals are not present as
carbonates in nature.
65
H2O (l)
G (s)
X (s)
[8]
Since H, G, and X are ionic, and they are formed from the same metal, the anionic part
containing C and N is in compound X. As in reaction [4], it is a hydrolysis where an acid reacts
with a base. The base is the cyanamide ion, CN22-, that is partially hydrogenated into HCN2which is an intermediate species in the formation of dihydrogen cyanamide, H2CN2.
X (s)
CO2 (g)
H2O (l)
A' (s)
I (s)
[9]
Under these conditions, X must be Ca(HCN2)2 and both protons from the carbonic acid produced
by reaction of CO2 and H2O allow the formation of dihydrogen cyanamide, H2CN2, i.e.
compound I.
I (s)
H2O (l)
J (s)
[10]
Since only one compound was formed in reaction [10], the hydrolysis must now be an addition of
water to I. To deduce the structure of compound J, one must know that of compound I. To
deduce the latter, one can refer to that of the cyanamide ion, CN22-.
Following are the three possible structures for cyanamide ion of compound H:
222N C N
C N N
C N N
The first two must be excluded because of the heavy negative charge (2-) on their respective
carbon and nitrogen atoms. In the third structure, the two negative charges are evenly distributed
on the two terminal nitrogen atoms. Adding two protons to this structure, one obtains a possible
structure of compound I which is a symmetrical molecule.
H N C N H
The addition of a water molecule to such a compound produces urea which is frequently used in
fertilizers. So compound J is urea, H2N(CO)NH2.
J (s)
H2O (l)
B (g)
K (g)
[11]
Hydrolysis of J causes the complete oxidation of carbon into CO2 (gas B) and into NH3 (gas K).
The latter has a strong, characteristic odour.
66
a)
A or A':
B:
C:
D:
E:
F:
G:
H:
I:
J:
K:
L:
M:
X:
CaCO3 (s)
Calcium carbonate (or calcareous rocks)
CO2 (g)
Carbon dioxide
CaO (s)
Calcium oxide
CaC2 (s)
Calcium carbide
CO (g)
Carbon monoxide
C2H2 (g)
Ethyne
Ca(OH)2 (s)
Calcium hydroxide
CaCN2 (s)
Calcium cyanamide
H2CN2 (s)
Dihydrogen cyanamide
H2N(CO)NH2 Urea
NH3
Ammonia
CH3CHO
Ethanal
CH3CO2H
Ethanoic acid
Ca(HCN2)2
Calcium hydrogen cyanamide
b)
C N H
and
H2N
C N
The second structure does not possess any center of symmetry and its C N function
can absorb between 2260 and 2220 cm-1 in its infrared spectrum. It is thus the major
structure.
c)
d)
NH 2
The crystal structure of CaC2 is shown below. Each unit cell contains 4 Ca2+ ions and 4
C22- ions. The distance between two Ca2+ cations on the edge of the cell is equal to the
thickness d of this cell. This distance is the cubic root of volume V of the cell. From
the density of CaC2 one can calculate the volume of its unit cell.
67
C22-
Ca2+
d = (V)1/3;
= 2.22 g/cm3;
M = 80.105 g/mol
CaCO3 (s)
[1]
2000-2200 C
CaO (s)
CaC2 (s)
3 C (s)
2 H2O (l)
CaC2 (s)
C2H2 (g)
CO (g)
+
Ca(OH)2 (s)
[2]
[4]
HgSO4
C2H2
H2O (l)
CH3CHO
[4']
[O], Mn cat.
68
CH3CO2H
[4'']
69
Ca(OH)2 (s)
Ca(OH)2 (s)
CaO (s)
CO2 (g)
H2O (l)
H2O (l)
[5]
CaCO3 (s)
[6]
1000-1100 C
CaC2 (s)
N2 (g)
CaCN2 (s)
C (s)
[7]
Ca(HCN2)2 (s) + CO2 (g) + H2O (l) CaCO3 (s) + 2 H2CN2 (s)
H2CN2 (s)
H2O (l)
H2N(CO)NH2 (s)
[8]
[9]
H2N(CO)NH2 (s)
H2O (l)
CO2 (g)
[10]
+
2 NH3 (g)
[11]
SOLUTION 26
a)
Acheson Process:
SiO2 + 3C
SiC + 2CO
450 C
n
Ar
CH3
1) 350 C, air
Si CH 2 n
2) 1300 C, N2
H
nSiC + nCH 4 + nH 2
70
71
West Process:
CH3
Si
UV
vacuum
nSiC + nC6H6 + nH 2
nSiC + nH 2
H
Theoretical ceramic yield = M[SiC] / M[(CH3)(H)Si]
Yield = (40.097 g mol-1) / (44.129 g mol-1)]
Theoretical ceramic yield = 90.9%
b)
72
The cubic structures of diamond and silicon carbide are shown below. That of SiC
corresponds to the structure of zinc blende (ZnS).
Diamond
SiC
73
74
a = d/2;
b2 = 2a2;
c2 = a2 + b2 = 3a2
c = (3a2)1/2 = [3(d/2)2]1/2
c = [3 x ((4.36 x 10-8 cm)/2)2]1/2
c = 3.78 x 10-8 cm
dSi-C = c/2 = (3.78 x 10-8 cm)/2
dSi-C = 1.89 x 10-8 cm
Atomic radius of Si = dSi-C - Atomic radius of C
where atomic radius of C = (1.54 x 10-8 cm)/2 = 0.77 x 10-8 cm
Atomic radius of Si = (1.89 x 10-8 cm) - (0.77 x 10-8 cm)
Atomic radius of Si = 1.12 x 10-8 cm
(literature value = 1.17 x 10-8 cm; Butler & Harrod, 1988, p. 48)
75
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
Energetics:
[1] is an endothermic reaction. A large amount of energy is required to break strong
Si-O-Si bonds; the resulting acid is weak due to the low electronegativity of Si and hence
not much H+ solvation energy is available to compensate (the hydration of a proton in
water liberates a large amount of energy). The higher electronegativities of P(V) and
S(VI) result in strong acids in [2] and [3]; the ionization of H+ is essentially complete,
liberating a huge amount of hydration energy. In [4], [5] and [6], the oxide ion is a
powerful base, which has no difficulty in attacking the electron deficient Si, P or S to
produce additional strong X-O- bonds. The formation of highly charged ions in these
reactions also gives rise to very large, favourable electrostatic attraction energies, known
as lattice energies in the solid compounds.
76
The Si-O-Si bond is not appropriate as an energy storage bond because its hydrolysis is
not exothermic under physiological conditions. In addition it reacts only very slowly with
mild reagents (witness the geological time-scale for the erosion of silicate rocks!). The SO-S bond (pyrosulfate) hydrolyses exothermically, but the hydrolysis occurs too easily
(rapidly) for pyrosulfate to be used as a storage device. The pyrophosphate link
hydrolyses exothermically, but only does it very slowly under physiological conditions.
Thus the bond energy can be stored and only released in the presence of a suitable
catalyst. Living systems are rich in natural catalysts (enzymes) with the special function
of catalyzing the reaction of pyrophosphate linkages to take advantage of the stored
energy.
SOLUTION 28
a)
b)
c)
7
is the oxidation state of Cu in this material.
3
d)
The common oxidation states of Cu are I, II and (rarely) III. For three Cu ions to have an
7
, there are 2 x Cu(II) and a single Cu(III). In the
average oxidation state of
3
deoxygenated material all three Cus are Cu(II).
77
= 13 *
= 11*
= 24
= 16
= 24
= 40
The unpaired electron on the superoxide will pair with the unpaired electron on the N to
form a covalent bond. This is a radical combination reaction. Because the N in the
product has a lone pair, the molecule will be bent, thus:
O N
O O
[ONO 2] CO2 is a weak Lewis acid and the peroxonitrite is a weak Lewis base. We will get an
acid/base reaction. It is hard to predict whether the peroxonitrite will bond through the
lone pair on the N or through the O. Two structures are possible:
O
C O O N
O
O
or
O O
C
N
O
[ONO 2CO2] -
78
b)
c)
d)
Cl
Cl
H3N
Cr
H3N
NH 3
NH 3
Cl
ii)
NH 3
Cr
Cl
Cl
trans
Cl
NH 3
[(NH 3) 4Cl2Cr]Cl
NH 3
NH 3
cis
different ways of arranging the triads of like ligands. The facial isomer is
obtained when they are all on the corners of a common triangular face of the
octahedron (placing three like ligands on a common face forces the other three to
occupy the diagonally opposite triangular face of the octahedron). The meridional
isomer results from placing three like ligands at three corners of an equatorial
square of the octahedron (the other three are then forced to occupy
79
fac-trichlorotris(pyridine)cobalt(III)
mer-trichlorotris(pyridine)cobalt(III)
Cl
Cl
py
Cl
py
Cl
Co
Co
py
Cl
py
Cl
[py 3Cl3Co]
facial
iii)
py
py
meridional
Cl
H2O
H2O
CNS
Co
H2O
H2O
H2O
Cl
H2O
H2O
H2O
SNC
Co
H2O
H2O
CNS
H2O
H2O
H2O
Cl
Co
H2O
H2O
The resulting isomers are known as linkage isomers. Another possible isomer of
this compound would result from interchange of the coordinated CNS with the
free Cl. This is known as ionization isomerism.
The compounds are: pentaaquathiocyanato-C-cobalt(II) chloride.
pentaaquathiocyanato-S-cobalt(II) chloride
pentaaquachlorocobalt(II) thiocyanate
iv)
80
Cl
Pt
(H 3C) 3P
P(CH 3) 3
Br
Br
Pt
P(CH 3) 3
(H 3C) 3P
P(CH 3) 3
Cl
P(CH 3) 3
The relevant concept was the recognition that compounds possessing the property of not
being superimposable on their mirror image (we now call this property chirality) cause a
rotation in the plane of polarization of plane-polarized light. Werner therefore set out to
prepare a coordination compound with this property. On the assumption that Co3+
complexes have octahedral geometry, he deduced that [en2Cl2Co]Cl should have two
non-superimposable structures that differ only in that they are mirror images of each
other. This was indeed found to be the case, establishing that the geometry of the
complex is rigid and octahedral.
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Co
Cl
Cl
Co
Co
Cl
Cl
cis
d)
enantiomers
optically active
Cl
cis
trans
not optically active
The new theory was the theory of ionic conductivity. The new theory allowed the
determination of the number of ions in an ionic compound from conductivity
measurements. The series of compounds [(NH3)xCl3Cr] (x=3 to 6) are : [(NH3)3Cl3Cr]
(neutral); [(NH3)4Cl2Cr]Cl (2 ions); [(NH3)5ClCr]Cl2 (3 ions); [(NH3)6Cr]Cl3 (4 ions).
From the numbers of ions, it is possible to conclude that the number of ligands
coordinated to Cr3+ remains at 6 throughout the series.
81
b)
S =
c)
Since E =
3
(nRT), it is thus independent of volume.
2
Thus E = 0 in this process which is isothermal.
dq rev
dq
and thus dS = rev ; substituting dwrev = -PextdV we obtain
T
T
dS =
-dwrev P ext dV
=
T
T
Integrating gives:
dV
V
= nRln2V nRlnV
2V
= nRln2
= nRln
V
Thus S = nRln2 (which is > 0)
2V
S = dS = V nR
82
Each of E, S and G are state functions and are thus independent of the pathway.
Therefore:
Erev = Eirrev = 0
Srev = Sirrev = nRln2
Grev = Girrev = -nRTln2
e)
f)
dq rev
= nRln 2
T
dq
= - rev = nR ln 2
T
Ssys =
Ssurr
g)
Note that if each particle has two possible states, then with No particles there are 2No
possible arrangements.
S = S2 - S1
= klnW2 - klnW1
= kln(2No) - kln(1No)
= kln(2No)
= Nokln2
= nRln2 (since k = R/No)
SOLUTION 32
a)
The process is adiabatic and thus q = 0 and thus
E = -w = n Cv T = 1( Cp - R)T = 1(28.2 - 8.314)(-30) = -597 J
(also E = H - (PV) = H - nRT = -846 - 8.314(-30) = -597 J)
and therefore w = +597 J.
H = n Cp T = 28.2(-30) = -846 J
83
b)
q rev
= 0 since the process is adiabatic
T
cooled
O2(g)
O2(l)
O2(l)
90K
90K
55K
- Hfus
O2(s)
cooled
55K
O2(s)
10K
Hsys = H
o
vap
+ nCp (l)dT - H
90
10
o
fus
+ nCp (s)dT
55
Ssys
84
G = G + RTlnQ and Q =
-G o
RT
= e -0.266 = 0.766
(0.1)(0.01)2
(1)(55.5)
SOLUTION 34
a)
k1
O2 + O
O3
k-1
O3 + O
k2
2O2
slow
-d[O3 ]
= k1[O3] - k-1[O2][O] + k2[O3][O]
dt
Therefore we have [ O] =
d[O]
= 0 = k1[O3] -k-1[O2][O] -k2[O3][O]
dt
k 1[O3 ]
and substitution of this into the above gives:
k 1[O 2 ]+ k 2 [O3 ]
k1[O3 ]k 1 [O2 ]
k 1[O3 ]k 2 [O3 ]
d[O3 ]
which simplifies to:
= k 1[O3 ]
+
dt
k -1[O2 ] + k 2 [O3 ] k -1[O2 ] + k 2 [O3 ]
85
d[O3 ]
2k 2 [O3 ]
2k1 k 2 [O3 ]2
= k 1[O3 ]
=
dt
k-1 [O2 ]+ k2 [O3 ] k-1[O 2 ] + k 2 [O3 ]
If k-1[O2]>>k2[O3] then:
If k-1[O2]<<k2[O3] then:
Thus kexp =
2k1 k 2
and k'exp = 2k1
k-1
SOLUTION 35
a)
d[P]
= k[X]x [Y]y [Z]z
dt
Then by inspection x = 2, y = 0, and z = 1/2
Thus
b)
d[P]
= k[X]2 [Z]2
dt
0.002 M h-1 =
d[P]
= k[0.01M]2 [0.01M]2
dt
3
2
86
1
1
=
1 1 = 0.35h (21 min )
c 0 k' (0.01)(283M h )
1
1
2po, 2p1
3
2*
2s
2s
2
1*
1s
1s
1
12
121*1
121*2
121*221
b)
H2:
H2-:
He2:
He2-:
Bond order 1
Bond order 0.5
Bond order 0
Bond order 0.5
c)
From the bond orders in (b) it is apparent that H2- and He2- have the same stability.
d)
e)
87
The hexagon of benzene can be regarded as being made up of 6 equilateral triangles and
thus the radius of the ring is equal to the length along one edge.
rb = 1.50 x 10-8 cm
For the chlorophyll core which is being approximated by a dodecagon, the ring can be
regarded as being made up of 12 isosceles triangles
C-C = r b = 2a
rc
with the internal angle at the centre of each triangle thus being 360 /12 = 30 and a base
of one C-C bond length which is equal to rb = 1.50 x 10-8 cm. Dividing the isosceles
triangle in half so that it is made up of two right triangles, we thus have:
sin(30/2) =
a
rc
1
1
rb
rb
2
2
r c =
= 2r b = 3.00 x 10-8 cm
sin(15) 0.25
88
Recall that each atomic orbital will be transformed into a molecular orbital. Thus from
the six atomic centres donating an electron each to the system of benzene we will
generate six molecular orbitals. From the 18 atomic centres involved in the chlorophyll
core we will similarly generate 18 molecular orbitals. To obtain a crude estimate of
where the molecular orbitals are with respect to each other, the following scheme works
quite well. Inscribe a circle around the atomic framework which involves the system
being sure that a single vertex is at the lowest point of the circle. Each vertex of the
system will map onto a molecular orbital, some of which will be at the same level (i.e.
will be degenerate). Thus for benzene we obtain 6 orbitals, two sets of which are
degenerate. The lower three are the bonding molecular orbitals and the upper three are
anti-bonding orbitals. The -electrons are placed into the orbitals according to Hunds
rule to arrive at the ground-state configuration of the molecule. A similar operation with
the chlorophyll core will lead to nine bonding (one lowest level and four degenerate pairs)
and nine anti-bonding orbitals (four degenerate pairs and one at the highest level).
3
2
1
0
MO levels
For benzene the 6 electrons will be placed in the lowest three MOs and thus the HOMO
will be that involving l = 1. For chlorophyll, the 18 electrons will fully fill up to and
including the orbital having l = 4.
Benzene HOMO l = 1:
d)
E 1 =
Chlorophyll HOMO l = 4:
E 4 =
Benzene LUMO l = 2:
E 2 =
Chlorophyll LUMO l = 5:
E 5 =
h2
2
2mr b
h2 4 2
16h 2
16h 2
2h2
=
=
=
2mr c 2 2m(2r b )2 8mr b 2 mr b 2
h 2 22
2
2mr b
4h 2
2
2mr b
h2 52
25h 2
25h 2
=
=
2mr c 2 2m(2r b )2 8mr b 2
89
e)
Benzene:
E abs
4h2
h2
3h2
12h2
= E2 E1 =
=
=
2mr b 2 2mr b 2 2mr b 2 8mr b 2
Chlorophyll: E abs = E 5 E 4 =
25h 2
16h2
9h2
9h 2
=
=
2mr c 2 2mr c2 2mr c 2 8mr b 2
Thus Eabs (chlorophyll) is predicted to be less than Eabs (benzene) by a factor of 12:9
whereas the observed ratio is 2:1 (or 12:6).
In chlorophyll, the C-C-C path is actually longer than the direct C-C distance determined
above. The effective distance is actually about 2 x rc. Thus reworking the above
relationship gives:
E abs
25h2
16h 2
9h2
9h2
9h 2
= E5 E4 =
=
=
=
2m( 2r c )2 2m( 2r c )2 2m( 2r c ) 2 4m(r c )2 16mr b 2
From Hunds rule the electrons will go into the orbitals in an unpaired manner until
required to form pairs. The l4 orbital is degenerate but will be completely filled with the
last of the 18 electrons. The resulting species will have S = 0 and will be diamagnetic.
SOLUTION 38
a)
2 Mn2+(aq) + O2(aq) + 4OH-(aq) 2 MnO2(s) + 2H2O
MnO2(s) + 4H+(aq) + 2I-(aq) Mn2+(aq) + I2(aq) + 2H2O
I2(aq) + 2S2O32-(aq) S4O62-(aq) + 2I-(aq)
90
SOLUTION 39
a)
First, correcting for the dilution of the aliquot during the second measurement.
Corrected absorbance = 0.517 x 26.0 = 0.538
25.0
Absorbance due to 0.05 mg of phosphate = 0.538 - 0.428 = 0.110
b)
c)
d)
SOLUTION 40
a)
Ligand to cation ratio
From the graph of absorbance versus R concentration obtain a mole ratio of 3.0 and
therefore the complex is CoR32+
Montral Canada, July 1997
91
Formation constant
Stoichiometry where lines intersect indicates the following :
Co(II) + 3 R CoR32+
formation constant Kf =
[CoR 3 2+ ]
[Co(II )][R]3
2.5 x 10-5
= 2.37 x 10-12
(2.5 x 10-5 )(7.5 x 10-5 )3
SOLUTION 41
a)
The solubility product Ksp of lead chromate at 18 C is 1.77 x 10-14.
The dissolution of lead chromate is represented by the following equation:
PbCrO4(s) Pb2+ + CrO42Therefore, in pure water, the solubility of lead chromate is equal to the concentration of
either the Pb2+ or the CrO42- in a saturated salt solution.
Therefore,
Pb2+ = CrO42- = SPbCrO4 = 1.33 x 10-7 mol/L ( ksp )
b)
In such a solution, the solubility of lead chromate is no longer equal to the concentration
of chromate ions since a large part of these ions are provided by potassium chromate.
However, its solubility is equal to the concentration of lead ions all provided by lead
chromate.
Therefore,
SPbCrO4 = SPb2+ =
92
k spPbCrO 4
1.77 x 10 -14
= 1.77 x 10-13
[CrO4 2- ]
0.1
=
SPbCrO4 = CrO42- =
k spPbCrO 4
3.00 x 10-7 + [CrO4 2- ]
1.77 x 10-14
3.00 x 10-7 + [CrO4 2- ]
MnO4- Mn2+.
MnO4- Mn2+ + 4H2O
MnO4- + 8H+ Mn2+ + 4H2O
MnO4- + 8H+ + 5e- Mn2+ + 4H2O
5 (Fe +2 Fe +3 + 1e-)
1 (MnO4- + 8H+ + 5e- Mn2+ + 4H2O)
Overall
5 Fe +2 + MnO4- + 8H+ 5Fe +3 + Mn2+ + 4H2O
93
94
Sample Calculations:
10.00 mL Mg2+ standard solution required 17.00 mL EDTA solution:
i)
1.00 mg Mg 2+
10.00 mL Mg 2+
1000 mL EDTA
1 mole Mg 2+
1 mole EDTA
x
x
x
x
2+
3
2+
1.00 mL Mg
17.00 mL EDTA
24.31 x 10 mg Mg
1 L EDTA
1 mole Mg 2+
= 2.42 x 10-2 M EDTA
ii)
10.00 mL Pb2+ solution and 25.00 mL EDTA solution required 11.00 mL Mg2+ standard
solution:
moles EDTA = moles Mg2+ + moles Pb2+
-2
2.42 x 10 mol EDTA
25.00 mL EDTA x
= 6.05 x 10-4 mol EDTA
1000 mL
11.00 mL Mg2+ x
1.00 mg Mg2+
mol Mg 2+
x
24.31 x 10 3 mg Mg2+
1.00 mL Mg 2+
moles Pb2+ = moles EDTA - moles Mg2+ = 1.53 x 10-4 mol Pb2+
1.53 x 10-4 mol Pb 2+
= 1.53 x 10-2 M Pb2+
2+
0.010 L Pb sol' n
95
[Ca 2+ ] =
moles Ca 2+
PROBLEM 48 - EXPERIMENTAL
Ritter Reaction
The product is N-tert-butyl benzamide. See Journal of Chemical Education, Vol 71, 1994, pages
A200-202.
PROBLEM 50 - EXPERIMENTAL
Synthesis and Identification of an Organic Compound
Compound A:
Compound B:
96
Value
Quantit numrique
amu
1.66054 x 10-27 kg
Nombre dAvogadro
Bohr radius
a0
5.292 x 10-11 m
Rayon de Bohr
Boltzmann constant
Constante de Boltzmann
Charge of an electron
1.60218 x 10-19 C
10-14 (25 C)
96,485 C mol-1
Constante de Faraday
Gas constant
Mass of an electron
me
9.10939 x 10-31 kg
Kw
mn
1.67493 x 10-27 kg
1.00866 amu
Mass of a proton
mp
1.67262 x 10-27 kg
1.00728 amu
Plancks constant
6.62608 x 10-34 J s
Constante de Planck
Speed of light
Vitesse de la lumire
1 x 10-8 cm
1 eV
1.60219 x 10-19 J
1 cal
4.184 J
1 atm
101.325 kPa
1 bar
1 x 105 Pa
97
This set of preparatory problems was prepared using a Macintosh Centris 610 with Word
(version 5.1a from Microsoft) and ChemIntosh (version 3.4.4 from SoftShell
International). The fonts used are Times and Symbol (both from Adobe).
An electronic version of these preparatory problems is available by sending a disk to the
address below. The file will be provided as a self-extracting StuffIt archive in a
Macintosh format. The compressed file is approximately 400 K. The expanded file is
approximately 1.8 Meg. Electronic mail transfer of the file is also possible. If this route
is chosen, it is strongly recommended that the recipient use Eudora or another mail
programme which is capable of receiving and decoding attached files which have been
Binhexed.
Gordon Bates
Department of Chemistry
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, B.C.
Canada
V6T 1Z1
e-mail: flip@chem.ubc.ca
98
99