暫缺《醫(yī)用有機(jī)化學(xué) Medical Organic hemistry》作者簡(jiǎn)介
圖書目錄
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Organic compounds and organic chemistry 1.2 Features of organic compounds 1.3 Atomic orbital 1.4 Electron configuration 1.5 lonic and covalent bonds: octet rule 1.6 The carbon-carbon covalent bond 1.7 How the structure of a compound is represented 1.8 Molecular orbitals 1.9 Molecular geometry 1.10 Acids and bases 1.11 Reaction mechanism 1.12 Functional groups and families of organic compounds 1.13 Significance of studying organic chemistry CHAPTER 2 ALKANES AND CYCLOALKANES 2.1 Alkanes 2.2 Cycloalkanes 2.3 Pheromones:communication by means of chemicals CHAPTER 3 ALKENES, ALKYNES AND CONUGATED DIENVES 3.1 Alkenes 3.2 Alkynes 3.3 Conjugated dienes 3.4 Dynemicin A: An enediyne drug CHAPTER 4 AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS 4.1 Classification of aromatic hydrocarbons 4.2 Structure of benzene 4.3 Nomenclature of derivatives of benzene 4.4 Physical properties of monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons 4.5 Chemical properties of monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons 4.6 Effect of substituents on reactivity and orientation in aromatic electrophilic substitution 4.7 Fused-ring aromatic hydrocarbons 4.8 Aromaticity and Hückel rule:4n+2π electron rule 4.9 Some aromatic compounds in biochemistry CHAPTER 5 STEREOCHEMISTRY 5.1 Types of isomers 5.2 Optical activity.plane-polarized light 5.3 Properties of enatiomers 5.4 Prediction of enantiomerism 5.5 Compounds with only one chiral carbon 5.6 Representations of molecules containing chiral carbons: Fischer projections 5.7 Assignment of the configurations of chiral carbons 5.8 Compounds with more than one chiral carbon 5.9 Enantiomers without chiral carbons 5.10 Chirality in the biological world 5.11 Origin of biological properties relating to chirality CHAPTER 6 ALKYL HALIDES 6.1 Nomenclature of alkyl halides 6.2 Physical properties of alkyl halides 6.3 Chemical properties of alkyl halides 6.4 Preparation of alkyl halides 6.5 Inconvenient DDT CHAPTER 7 ALCOHOLS, PHENOLS, AND ETHERS 7.1 Alcohols 7.2 Phenols 7.3 Ethers 7.4 Thioalcohols, thioethers and disulfides CHAPTER 8 ALDEHYDES AND KETONES 8.1 Chemical structure of the carbonyl group 8.2 Nomenclature of aldehydes and ketones 8.3 Synthesis of aldehydes and ketones 8.4 Oxidation of aldehydes 8.5 Nucleophilic addition reaction of aldehydes and ketones 8.6 Reduction 8.7 Nucleophilic addition of water: hydration 8.8 Nucleophilic addition of alcohol:acetal formation 8.9 Nucleophilic addition of amines to form imines and enamine 8.10 Nucleophilic addition of Grignard reagent:alcohol formation 8.11 Nucleophilic addition of hydrogen cyanide:cyanohydrin formation 8.12 Keto-Enol tautomerism 8.13 Acidity of alpha hydrogen atoms:enolate anion formation 8.14 Reactivity of enols and enolateions 8.15 Alkylation of aldehydes and ketones 8.16 Halogenation of aldehydes and ketones and haloform reaction 8.17 Condensation of aldehydes and ketones:the aldol reaction CHAPTER 9 CARBOXYLIC ACIDS AND CARBOXYLIC ACID DERIVATIVES 9.1 Carboxylic acids 9.2 Carboxylic acid derivatives 9.3 Other carboxylic acid derivatives CHAPTER 10 AMINES AND HETEROCYCLES 10.1 Nomenclature of amines 10.2 Structure of amines 10.3 Physical properties of amines 10.4 Chemical properties of amines 10.5 Synthesis of amines 10.6 Heterocyeles 10.7 Sulfa drags CHAPTER 11 CARBOHYDRATES 11.1 Monosaecharides 11.2 Disaccharides 11.3 Polysaccharides CHAPTER 12 LIPIDS 12.1 Classification of lipids 12.2 Fatty acids 12.3 Structure and physical property of triacylglycerols 12.4 Chemical reactions of triaeylglycerols 12.5 Amphipathie hydrolyzable lipids 12.6 Steroid: cholesterol, steroid hormones and bile salt CHAPTER 13 PROTEINS 13.1 Introduction 13.2 Reactions of amino acids 13.3 Synthesizing amino acids 13.4 Condensation of amino acids and formation of peptides 13.5 A brief introduction of proteins CHAPTER 14 NUCLEIC ACID 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Nucleotides and nueleosides 14.3 Nucleic acid structure References