Organic chemistry is a huge and diverse field. What kind of glassware do you have? What is your budget?
I would recommend starting with basic things like forming esters and symmetric ethers, salts of carboxylic acids, steam-distillation of oils from
plant material, and isolating caffeine from coffee or beta-carotene from carrots, maybe oxidize some things with permanganate.
With these preparations you will be able to practice things like vacuum filtration, liquid-liquid extraction, desiccating and drying, and fractional
distillation, all of which are essential techniques to more advanced organic chemistry.
You will need more than just beakers and test tubes for the majority of the things mentioned above, but the starting materials are cheap, unregulated,
and widely available in the USA. I think we will need more information about your lab to make good experimental recommendations.
Try looking for undergraduate organic chemistry lab manuals. |