Organic Synthesis
Mastery Kit
A complete, science-of-learning-powered resource to achieve A* on organic synthesis — reactions, mechanisms, analysis, flashcards, and exam practice.
1 — Spaced Retrieval Practice
Don’t re-read notes. Instead, close them and try to recall. The effort of reconstruction strengthens long-term memory and prevents cramming. Revisit each reaction set after 1 day, then 3 days, then 1 week.
2 — Interleaved Practice
Never drill one reaction type 30 times in a row. Mix alkenes + haloalkanes + carbonyl questions in a single session. Research shows interleaving can triple average exam performance on reaction selection tasks.
3 — Dual Coding
Pair verbal information with visuals. Every reaction should exist in your memory as both words AND a structural diagram. The Pathway Map tab combines both simultaneously.
4 — Elaborative Interrogation
Ask “WHY?” for every reagent and condition. Why NaBH₄ not LiAlH₄ for a carbonyl? Why reflux for esterification? Understanding the mechanism prevents confusion under pressure.
5 — Chunking by Functional Group
Group all ~50 reactions into 9 functional group “chunks”. Master one chunk fully before adding another — but then interleave them. This builds a flexible schema for designing multi-step routes.
6 — Free Recall Sheets
Every 2–3 days, take a blank sheet and write every reaction you know from memory: starting material → reagents/conditions → product → mechanism type. Then compare to the Reactions tab and correct errors immediately.
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkane (C–H bond) | Haloalkane (mixture of products) | Cl₂ or Br₂ | UV light (ultraviolet, photochemical initiation) ⚠️ Limitation: mixture of mono/di/tri-substituted products formed — poor selectivity |
Free Radical Substitution (FRS): initiation → propagation → termination | AS |
| Long-chain alkane | Shorter alkane + alkene (+ H₂) | Thermal: heat only · Catalytic: silica/alumina (zeolite) catalyst | Thermal: very high temperature (~600–700°C), high pressure · Catalytic: ~600°C, zeolite, lower pressure | Cracking (thermal or catalytic) | AS |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkene | Alkane (hydrogenation) | H₂ | Ni catalyst, ~150°C (or Pd/Pt at room temp) | Addition / Reduction | AS |
| Alkene | Dihalogenoalkane | Br₂ (in organic solvent e.g. hexane) or Cl₂ | Room temperature, no UV light needed Also used as test: orange bromine water → colourless | Electrophilic Addition | AS |
| Alkene | Halogenoalkane (mono) | HBr or HCl | Room temperature, pure gas or solution | Electrophilic Addition (Markovnikov’s rule applies to unsymmetrical alkenes) | AS |
| Alkene | Alcohol | Steam (H₂O) | H₃PO₄ catalyst (phosphoric acid), 300°C, 60–65 atm Industrial production of ethanol from ethene | Electrophilic Addition (hydration) | AS |
| Alkene | Diol (1,2-diol) | Cold dilute acidified KMnO₄ (potassium manganate(VII)) | Cold, dilute — purple KMnO₄ decolourises | Oxidation (addition of two OH groups across C=C) | A2 |
| Alkene monomers | Addition polymer | Initiator (e.g. organic peroxide) | High pressure, catalyst — conditions vary by monomer | Addition polymerisation (radical mechanism) | AS |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Halogenoalkane | Alcohol | NaOH (aqueous) | Heat under reflux (aqueous solvent favours substitution) | Nucleophilic Substitution (SN1 or SN2 depending on substrate) | AS |
| Halogenoalkane | Alkene | KOH dissolved in ethanol (ethanolic KOH) | Heat under reflux (ethanolic solvent favours elimination) ⚠️ Solvent is critical: aqueous → substitution; ethanolic → elimination | Elimination (E2) | AS |
| Halogenoalkane + excess NH₃ | Primary amine | Excess ethanolic ammonia (NH₃) | Sealed tube or pressure vessel, heat ⚠️ Excess NH₃ needed to minimise further substitution to 2°/3° amines | Nucleophilic Substitution | A2 |
| Halogenoalkane | Nitrile (+1 carbon) | KCN in ethanol (ethanolic KCN) | Heat under reflux Carbon chain extended by 1 — key in synthesis routes | Nucleophilic Substitution (CN⁻ is the nucleophile) | A2 |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary alcohol (1°) | Aldehyde | Acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ (K₂Cr₂O₇ + dilute H₂SO₄), shown as [O] | Warm gently + distil product immediately to prevent further oxidation Orange → green colour change observed | Oxidation | AS |
| Primary alcohol (1°) | Carboxylic acid | Acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ (excess [O]) | Heat under reflux (excess oxidising agent, product not removed) | Oxidation | AS |
| Secondary alcohol (2°) | Ketone | Acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ (represented as [O]) | Heat under reflux or warm Ketone cannot be oxidised further under normal conditions | Oxidation | AS |
| Tertiary alcohol (3°) | No reaction | Any oxidising agent | — | Resistant to oxidation (no H on C bearing OH) | AS |
| Alcohol | Alkene | Conc. H₃PO₄ (preferred) or conc. H₂SO₄ | Heat under reflux, ~170°C (H₂SO₄) or ~170–180°C (H₃PO₄) | Elimination / Dehydration (E1) | AS |
| Alcohol | Chloroalkane | PCl₅ (phosphorus pentachloride) | Room temperature (vigorous — HCl gas evolved and POCl₃ also formed) | Nucleophilic Substitution | AS |
| Alcohol | Bromoalkane | NaBr + conc. H₂SO₄ (or HBr gas) | Heat under reflux | Nucleophilic Substitution | AS |
| Alcohol | Ester | Carboxylic acid + conc. H₂SO₄ (catalyst) | Heat under reflux (reversible equilibrium) | Condensation / Esterification (reversible) | AS |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aldehyde → primary alcohol · Ketone → secondary alcohol | Alcohol | NaBH₄ (sodium tetrahydridoborate / sodium borohydride) | Aqueous ethanol (protic solvent), room temperature | Nucleophilic Addition / Reduction (H⁻ nucleophile from NaBH₄) | A2 |
| Aldehyde / Ketone | Hydroxynitrile (cyanohydrin) | HCN (produced in situ from KCN/NaCN + dilute H₂SO₄) — CN⁻ is the nucleophile | Room temperature, slightly acidic or neutral conditions Chain extended by +1 carbon; product has chiral centre → racemic mixture | Nucleophilic Addition (CN⁻ attacks carbonyl carbon) | A2 |
| Aldehyde (only) | Carboxylic acid | Acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ [O] | Heat under reflux ⚠️ Ketones do NOT oxidise further under normal conditions — this is an aldehyde-only reaction | Oxidation | A2 |
| Aldehyde / Ketone | Yellow/orange 2,4-DNP precipitate | 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine solution (Brady’s reagent / 2,4-DNPH) | Room temperature — yellow, orange or red-orange precipitate forms Confirms C=O present; does NOT distinguish aldehyde from ketone | Condensation (nucleophilic addition then elimination of water) | A2 |
| Aldehyde only (NOT ketones) | Tollens’: silver mirror · Fehling’s: brick-red Cu₂O precipitate | Tollens’ reagent (ammoniacal silver nitrate, [Ag(NH₃)₂]⁺) · OR Fehling’s solution (blue Cu²⁺ complex) | Warm gently in water bath Distinguishes aldehyde (positive) from ketone (no reaction) | Oxidation (aldehyde oxidised to carboxylate; Ag⁺ or Cu²⁺ reduced) | A2 |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carboxylic acid + alcohol | Ester + water | Conc. H₂SO₄ (catalyst) | Heat under reflux (reversible — equilibrium mixture) | Condensation / Esterification | AS |
| Carboxylic acid | Acyl chloride | PCl₅ (phosphorus pentachloride) or SOCl₂ (thionyl chloride) | Room temperature (vigorous, HCl gas evolved) | Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution | A2 |
| Ester | Carboxylic acid + alcohol | Dilute H₂SO₄ (acid hydrolysis) OR NaOH(aq) (base hydrolysis / saponification) | Heat under reflux · Base hydrolysis is irreversible and goes to completion | Hydrolysis | A2 |
| Acyl chloride + alcohol | Ester + HCl | Alcohol | Room temperature (faster than esterification — goes to completion, no catalyst needed) | Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution | A2 |
| Acyl chloride + NH₃ | Primary amide + HCl | Ammonia (NH₃) | Room temperature (very vigorous — white fumes of NH₄Cl also form) | Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution | A2 |
| Acyl chloride + amine (RNH₂) | Secondary amide + HCl | Primary or secondary amine | Room temperature | Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution | A2 |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Halogenoalkane + excess NH₃ | Primary amine (mainly) | Excess ethanolic ammonia | Sealed tube, heat under pressure ⚠️ Excess NH₃ minimises over-alkylation to 2° and 3° amines, but mixture still forms | Nucleophilic Substitution | A2 |
| Nitrile (R–CN) | Primary amine (R–CH₂NH₂) | LiAlH₄ in dry ether (anhydrous) OR H₂ + Ni catalyst | LiAlH₄: dry ether, then careful aqueous workup · H₂/Ni: high temp and pressure | Reduction | A2 |
| Nitrobenzene | Phenylamine (aniline) | Sn (tin) + conc. HCl | Heat under reflux; then add NaOH to liberate free amine from its salt | Reduction | A2 |
| Amine + acyl chloride | Amide (N-substituted) | Acyl chloride (RCOCl) | Room temperature (vigorous) | Nucleophilic Acyl Substitution | A2 |
| Starting Material | Product | Reagents | Conditions | Mechanism | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benzene | Nitrobenzene | Conc. HNO₃ + conc. H₂SO₄ (catalyst) | 50°C — do not exceed 55°C to prevent di-nitration Electrophile formed: HNO₃ + 2H₂SO₄ → NO₂⁺ + 2HSO₄⁻ + H₃O⁺ | Electrophilic Substitution (electrophile: NO₂⁺) | A2 |
| Benzene | Halobenzene (e.g. bromobenzene) | Br₂ + FeBr₃ (Lewis acid halogen carrier) · or AlBr₃; use AlCl₃/FeCl₃ for chlorination | Room temperature, anhydrous FeBr₃ is the catalyst — can be made in situ from Fe + Br₂ | Electrophilic Substitution | A2 |
| Benzene | Alkylbenzene | Chloroalkane (RCl) + anhydrous AlCl₃ (Lewis acid catalyst) | Anhydrous, heat under reflux ⚠️ Over-alkylation is a limitation — product is more reactive than benzene | Friedel-Crafts Alkylation (electrophilic substitution; electrophile: R⁺) | A2 |
| Benzene | Aryl ketone (e.g. phenylethanone) | Acyl chloride (RCOCl) + anhydrous AlCl₃ | Anhydrous, heat under reflux (~50°C) Preferred over alkylation: C=O deactivates ring, preventing over-acylation | Friedel-Crafts Acylation (electrophilic substitution; electrophile: RCO⁺) | A2 |
| Benzene | Cyclohexane | H₂ | Ni catalyst, 200°C, 30 atm pressure | Addition / Reduction (ring loses aromaticity) | A2 |
FUNCTIONAL GROUP INTERCONVERSION MASTER MAP — Edexcel A-Level
Step 2: Trace a pathway between them — if no direct arrow exists, find a 2–3 step route.
Step 3: Check C-chain length at each step — use nitrile formation to add +1C.
Step 4: Write out each step with exact reagents, conditions, and reaction type.
(b) Major product: 2-bromobutane [1]. Markovnikov’s rule: the electrophile (H⁺) adds to the carbon of the double bond with MORE hydrogens; the intermediate 2° carbocation is more stable than the 1° carbocation, so the Br⁻ adds to C-2. [1]
(c) KOH dissolved in ethanol (ethanolic KOH), heat under reflux [1]
Propan-1-ol → propanal (intermediate): acidified K₂Cr₂O₇, warm and distil immediately [1+1]
Propanal → propanoic acid: acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ (excess [O]), heat under reflux [1+1]
Route 2 (via haloalkane → nitrile → acid):
Propan-1-ol → 1-bromopropane: conc. HBr + H₂SO₄ or PCl₅, warm [1]
1-bromopropane → butanenitrile: ethanolic KCN, heat under reflux [1] → then acid hydrolysis to butanoic acid (note: +1C chain!)
Accept: direct from propan-1-ol → propanoic acid using acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ excess, reflux (1-step oxidation) for full credit if conditions clear.
Add Tollens’ reagent (ammoniacal silver nitrate) and warm gently in a water bath.
Propanal: silver mirror formed on inside of test tube [1]
Propanone: no change / no silver mirror [1]
Test 2 — Fehling’s solution:
Add Fehling’s solution and heat.
Propanal: brick-red/orange precipitate of Cu₂O forms [1]
Propanone: solution remains blue [1]
Note: 2,4-DNP (Brady’s reagent) gives orange precipitate with BOTH — does NOT distinguish them. [1 for correctly stating this]
(b) HNO₃ + 2H₂SO₄ → NO₂⁺ + 2HSO₄⁻ + H₃O⁺ [1]
(H₂SO₄ protonates HNO₃; loss of water generates nitronium ion NO₂⁺)
(c) Curly arrow from π-bond (C=C ring) to NO₂⁺ electrophile [1]; intermediate shows + charge on ring (arenium ion) [1]; curly arrow from C-H bond to restore aromaticity, releasing H⁺ [implied in description]
Reagents: Conc. H₂SO₄ + NaBr (or PBr₃); Conditions: warm [1+1]
Type: Nucleophilic Substitution [1]
Step 2: Bromoethane → propanenitrile (CH₃CH₂CN)
Reagents: Ethanolic KCN; Conditions: heat under reflux [1+1]
Type: Nucleophilic Substitution (+1 carbon) [1]
Step 3: Propanenitrile → butanenitrile (+1C again)
Note: To get butanenitrile (4C) from ethanol (2C) requires adding 2 carbons.
Alternative: Use 1-bromopropane as starting material from propan-1-ol, then KCN. [1]
Or: Apply KCN to bromoethane → propanenitrile, then reduce to propylamine — but butanenitrile requires one more C. Full credit for showing correct 3-step route with correct C-counting. [1]
(b) Butan-2-ol (CH₃CH₂CH(OH)CH₃) — a secondary alcohol [1]
(Grignard adds methyl to C of CHO; acid workup protonates alkoxide; chain = 4C total)
(c) Grignard reagents react vigorously with water/protic solvents — even traces of water destroy the reagent by protonating the carbanion (RMgX + H₂O → RH + Mg(OH)X) [1+1]
(b) Propene [1]
(c) Nucleophilic Substitution (SN2 or SN1):
• δ+ shown on C–Cl carbon [1]
• Curly arrow from lone pair on O of OH⁻ to C [1]
• Curly arrow from C–Cl bond to Cl [1]
• Products: propan-2-ol + Cl⁻ [1]
(d) Rate: iodo > bromo > chloro. The C–I bond has the lowest bond enthalpy so is easiest to break heterolytically in the rate-determining step. The C–Cl bond is strongest so hydrolyses slowest. [1+1]
(b) Butanone (methyl ethyl ketone); CH₃COCH₂CH₃ [1+1]
(c) Nucleophilic addition / reduction [1]; Butan-2-ol [1]
(d) Step 1: Butanone → butan-2-ol (NaBH₄, aq. ethanol) [1]
Step 2: Butan-2-ol → butanone → (only ketone, can’t oxidise further to acid easily from here; instead note: to make butanoic acid from a ketone requires a different route)
Better answer: Oxidise using acidified K₂Cr₂O₇ under vigorous conditions — ketones resist further oxidation, so you cannot make butanoic acid directly from butanone in one step [1 for recognising this complication]; alternatively reduce butanone to butan-2-ol, convert to 2-bromobutane (HBr), then SN2 substitution to carboxylic acid is not direct. Accept any valid 2-step route with correct intermediates [1]
(e) Strong absorption at ~1715 cm⁻¹ (C=O stretch of ketone) [1]; absence of broad O–H absorption at 2500–3300 cm⁻¹ (not a carboxylic acid) and absence of 2720 cm⁻¹ (not an aldehyde C–H) [1]
(b) Acylation introduces a C=O group (reactive, predictable) and gives a pure single product; alkylation can give poly-alkylated products (further substitution occurs more easily) and is harder to control. [1+1]
(c) NaBH₄ (sodium borohydride) in aqueous ethanol, room temperature [1]; Nucleophilic addition / reduction [1]
(d) Racemic mixture: an equimolar mixture of both enantiomers (non-superimposable mirror images) — has no overall optical activity [1]; The reduction creates a new chiral centre at the carbon bearing OH [1]; NaBH₄ attacks the planar C=O from either face with equal probability, giving equal amounts of R and S enantiomers [1]
(e) Negatives: AlCl₃ is used in stoichiometric amounts (not catalytic), generating large amounts of AlCl₄⁻ waste [1]; Acyl chlorides generate HCl gas (toxic, corrosive) [1];
Positives: reaction is efficient (high atom economy if using acyl chloride directly) [1]; conditions can be mild (room temp for some reactions) [1];
Overall evaluation: significant green chemistry concerns due to stoichiometric AlCl₃ and toxic byproducts — industry seeks alternative Brønsted or solid acid catalysts [1 for developed evaluation]
2. Use IR to identify key functional groups (C=O, O–H, N–H).
3. Calculate degree of unsaturation if needed.
4. Use chemical tests to confirm and distinguish.
5. Draw possible structures and eliminate using all data.
Key rule: Assign a functional group ONLY when you can cite specific evidence for it.
- Alkanes: FRS mechanism, cracking types
- Alkenes: all addition reactions + Markovnikov
- Daily: 5 flashcards, free recall at end
- Halogenoalkanes: SN1 vs SN2 vs elimination
- Rate of hydrolysis (C–X bond strength)
- Review Week 1 (10 min before new content)
- Alcohols: oxidation routes, dehydration
- Esterification conditions
- Interleave: mix Chunk A+B flashcards
- Carbonyls: NaBH₄, Tollens’, Fehling’s, DNP
- Distinguish aldehyde vs ketone
- Full free-recall sheet: Chunks A–C
- Carboxylic acids + acyl chlorides
- Ester hydrolysis (acid and base)
- Interleave: all 5 chunks in flashcards
- Amines: preparation, basicity
- Amides and polymerisation
- Full free-recall all reactions so far
- Benzene: structure, electrophilic substitution
- Nitration, halogenation, Friedel-Crafts
- Past paper: Topic 6 questions only
- Grignard reagents: formation + reactions
- Synthesis extension reactions (+C chain)
- Interleave all flashcards (random order)
- IR, MS: all key absorptions
- Chemical tests: all functional group tests
- Practice: unknown compound deduction Qs
- Multi-step synthesis (2–4 step problems)
- Retrosynthesis approach (work backwards)
- Do all Practice Qs in mixed order
- Past Edexcel Paper 2 & 3 questions
- Time yourself (1.2 min/mark)
- Error log: record every mistake and why
- Target weak areas from error log
- Final free-recall: all 50+ reactions
- Full mock paper under exam conditions
