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1.6: An Introduction to Functional Groups (AKA Spicing Up the Pasta)

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    424531
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    Now that you have a feeling for the alkanes, we will proceed to show that modifying them with various functional groups can bestow substantially different properties to the new structures. This will not be an exhaustive treatment but is instead meant to convey, using some simple examples, just how dramatic the effects of a few minor modifications to a given molecular structure can be. This is not just an academic exercise. Nature figured this out eons ago and employs such functional group modifications to, for example, convert hydrophilic molecules like sugars, which provide immediate energy when consumed as part of one’s diet, to hydrophobic molecules like lipids (fats) which are better suited to serve as a means for long-term energy storage. Indeed, much of organic chemistry is focused on how various functional groups can be interconverted to give molecules desirable properties or otherwise manipulate their reactivity.

    There are many different functional groups that we could use to illustrate these points but we’ll limit our discussion to those present in linoleic acid (Figure 1-21). These include:

    • the carbon-carbon double bond;

    • the carboxylic acid group, often written as -COOH. This functional group is actually the combination of two simpler functional groups, illustrating the fact that functional groups can act in tandem to further modify chemical properties. The two simpler groups are:

      • the hydroxyl group (-OH);

      • the carbonyl group (a carbon-oxygen double bond).

     

    Figure 1-21. Linoleic has two different types of functional groups: carbon-carbon double bonds (shown in red), and a carboxylic acid (shown in blue). Compounds with double bonds are called alkenes, so they are labeled as "alkene functional groups" in the figure. The inset shows the two functional groups that combine to make a carboxylic acid: the carbon-oxygen double bond is called a carbonyl (shown in green), and the oxygen-hydrogen group is called a hydroxyl.group (shown in purple) 
     


    1.6: An Introduction to Functional Groups (AKA Spicing Up the Pasta) is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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