phase containing the triphenylmethanol from the aqueous phase. The triphenlmethanol was then isolated and purified by crystallization and vacuum filtration. Reaction Scheme: Mechanism: The nucleophilic phenyl magnesium bromide attacks the electrophilic carbonyl of benzophenone to form a magnesium alkoxide. This is followed by hydrolysis by an acid to produce the alcohol‚ triphenylmethanol. Procedure: The procedure followed was as is described in "Laboratory Manual for Organic Chemistry 2311
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Protein Hydrolysis and Characterization Group 7 Niez‚ Robert Francis‚ *Orbin‚ Alfonso Ricardo* Parro‚ Athena Emmanuelle Peralta‚ Christian Department of Biological Sciences‚ University of Santo Tomas‚ Manila‚ Philippines • Abstract Hydrolyzed Protein is protein that has been hydrolyzed or broken down into its component amino acids. While there are many means of achieving this‚ two of the most common are prolonged boiling in a strong acid (acid-HVP) or strong base or using an enzyme such
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Amino Acids Glycine is the smallest of the amino acids. It is ambivalent‚ meaning that it can be inside or outside of the protein molecule. In aqueous solution at or near neutral pH‚ glycine will exist predominantly as the zwitterion. Alanine is a hydrophobic molecule. It is ambivalent‚ meaning that it can be inside or outside of the protein molecule. The α carbon of alanine is optically active; in proteins‚ only the L-isomer is found. Serine differs from alanine in that one of the methylenic
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Exam Name___________________________________ MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) 1) Disregarding stereoisomers‚ how many different enols can the β-diketone CH3 COCH 2 COCH 2 CH3 form? A) 3 B) 1 C) 4 D) 0 E) 2 2) Methylamine reacts with acetophenone to yield the: A) imine. B) enamine. C) acetal. D) amide
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Benzene 1 Benzene Benzene Identifiers [1] CAS number 71-43-2 PubChem 241 ChemSpider 236 UNII J64922108F EC number 200-753-7 KEGG C01407 ChEBI CHEBI:16716 ChEMBL CHEMBL277500 RTECS number CY1400000 Jmol-3D images Image 1 [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] Properties Molecular formula CH Molar mass 78.11 g mol−1 Appearance Colorless liquid Odor aromatic‚ gasoline-like
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dimethoxybenzene by reacting 1‚ 4 dimethoxybenzene with tertiary-butyl alcohol in the presence of sulfuric acid as a Lewis acid catalyst. The reaction will occur via the Friedel-Crafts alkylation mechanism‚ and involves the attack of the aryl group at the electrophilic trimethylcarbocation. The resulting product will be recrystallized using methanol and characterized using IR spectroscopy and melting point analysis. Materials Used: 1 beaker‚ 400-mL sand bath ice for ice bath Erlenmeyer flask‚ 25-mL several
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Preparation and Characterization of Alkene Balacanao‚ Gladys A.1‚ Miranda‚ MarilynI2 1 Student (s)‚ Subject/Section‚ School of Chemical Engineering‚ Chemistry and Biotechnology‚ Mapua Institute of Technology; 2 Professor‚ School of Chemical Engineering‚ Chemistry and Biotechnology‚ Mapua Institute of Technology [pic] ABSTRACT The purpose of this experiment is to prepare cyclohexene form cyclohexanol‚ and know the properties of alkene. The first part of this experiment is preparation of cyclohexene
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CHM456 ORGANIC CHEMISTRY 1 LABORATORY Contact hours: 3 hours/week Laboratory textbook: Pavia‚ Lampman‚ Kriz and Engel‚ Introduction to Organic Laboratoy Techniques 3rd Edition (2011) ** Students MUST obtain a copy of the textbook Synopsis This is an organic chemistry practical course which reinforce the theory and concepts studied in Organic Chemistry 1 (CHM456). It covers the learning of simple laboratory techniques such as reflux‚ distillation‚ extraction‚ crystallization and melting point
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Synthesis and Structure of Alcohols Alcohols can be considered organic analogues of water. H O H R O H Alcohols are usually classified as primary‚ secondary and tertiary. H R H OH H primary R R OH R R OH OH R secondary tertiary phenol Alcohols with the hydroxyl bound directly to an aromatic (benzene) ring are called phenols. Nomenclature of Alcohols (Normally any compound’s name which ends in –ol is an alcohol of some sort) IUPAC rules that:
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reckoned correctly that benzene is comprised of one sixmembered ring and three alternating (conjugated) double bonds b) Resistance to Addition Reactions – - although benzene has double bonds‚ it does not undergo typical alkene reactions such as electrophilic addition - benzene is‚ in fact‚ very stable towards hydrogenation‚ halogenation‚ hydration & addition of hydrogen halides: NR EX. H2 X2 C6H6 H2 O HX NR NR NR c) Preference for Substitution Reactions – - instead of addition reactions like
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