Hey guys. Now I want to introduce a topic that you might have heard before from general chemistry. But in organic chemistry, it's going to be significantly different. In general chemistry, you had to learn these complicated redox equations where you had to do several steps to get the right numbers and it was very quantitative. Honestly, that was a part of general chemistry I didn't like very much, and that's part of why I'm tutoring organic chemistry because I don't have to do as much math. In organic chemistry, oxidation-reduction really boils down to whether we are adding oxygens or hydrogens. Instead of looking at these complicated formulas and equations, we're really just going to be able to look at the molecule itself to tell if it's going to be oxidized or reduced. So for those of you that might have struggled with that in general chemistry, this is your ticket to really succeed at oxidation-reduction.
So let's go ahead and look at the definitions really quick. An oxidation reaction is really going to be any reaction that involves the increase in the oxygen content of the molecule. You're increasing the oxygen content. You're increasing the oxidation. Now one thing to keep in mind is that doesn't mean that you're adding extra oxygens. That just means that you have more carbons bonded to oxygen. You'll see how we can change that up in a second. There actually is a difference between the two. A reduction reaction would be any reaction that involves the increase of hydrogen content of a molecule. So as you're reducing something, you're increasing the amount of hydrogens that it has.
Let's look at this little scheme that is kind of a general roadmap of oxidation-reduction. What you'll notice is that first of all, oxidation and reduction are opposites of each other. That is something that even if you completely messed up with those equations in general chemistry, you should still know that they're opposites of each other. They're going in different directions. So, let's go ahead and start off with probably the most reduced form or what is the most reduced form of carbon and then we'll move forward. If I have to say one of these five structures is the most reduced structure, which one would it be? It would be the first one. That first structure is called methane. As you can see, methane is the most reduced one carbon hydrocarbon because it doesn't have any bonds to oxygen. It has only bonds to hydrogen. So methane would be fully reduced.
Now in this video, I don't want to focus on reagents. We'll do reagents in a little bit. But for right now, I just want you to focus on how can I tell something's more oxidized or less oxidized, something like that? As we move in this direction, as we move to the right in this little table here, what you're going to find is that you start having more and more and more bonds to oxygen. So as you can see, a primary alcohol would be a little bit more oxidized than methane because that primary alcohol now has one bond to oxygen. Now as we keep going, we can keep making more bonds to oxygen. As you can see, here I have an aldehyde. In this case, this is actually formaldehyde. That's the name of it, but I'll just keep it as aldehyde. That's fine. An aldehyde is going to be more oxidized than an alcohol. Is it because it has more oxygen atoms? No. It's because the carbon has more bonds to oxygen. So now it has two bonds instead of one. That would be a more oxidized carbon. Let's keep going. Now I've got a carboxylic acid. I'm just going to write COOH. Remember that that is the condensed form of the functional group. So a carboxylic acid would be even more oxidized because now you'll notice that it has three bonds to oxygen.
Finally, if I continue to keep oxidizing and oxidizing, notice that I'm getting rid of hydrogens and I'm adding bonds to oxygen. Finally, what I get to is fully oxidized carbon, which is actually considered inorganic carbon. This is not an organic molecule. Why? Remember that the definition of organic molecules was a carbon bonded to a hydrogen. I'm sorry. It needs carbon and hydrogens, but there needs to be hydrogens present for it to be organic. So this would be inorganic because there's no hydrogens present. This is CO2 gas. So completely oxidized carbon actually just evolves as CO2 gas. Completely reduced carbon is methane gas.
Alright. So I just want you guys to get a general feel that we could go either way, either direction on this chart depending on what the reagent is. Now the reagents that we're going to deal with in organic chemistry 1 are actually going to be the ones that are in this gray box. So notice that I have a gray box that is really only looking at a few of the different structures. We're ignoring the methane. We're ignoring the CO2. Why is that? Because in Organic 1, we're not really making a lot of these gases. What we're really trying to do is figure out how we can go from an alcohol to an aldehyde. How we can go from an aldehyde back to an alcohol. Stuff like that. We're trying to make sure that we know these transformations. So as we talk more about reagents in future topics or in later topics, we will focus on reagents that make these transformations possible, not the ones all the way to the extremes. So we're not going to be turning methane into CO2 in Organic 1. Okay. Cool.
So let's just do some really quick practice. As I said, this is way easier than redox reactions. You can just say, okay, are the following transformations in oxidation or reduction? So I'm going to go ahead and give you guys some time. Go ahead and end the video and then you guys will be able to select which one is the correct one. So go ahead and choose if this is going to be an oxidation reaction or a reduction reaction.