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Unit 2

Unit 2. Alkanes and Chemical Reactions. Alkanes . Nomenclature Physical Properties Reactions Structure and Conformations Cycloalkanes cis-trans isomerism ring strain conformations. Alkanes . All C atoms are sp 3 .

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Unit 2

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  1. Unit 2 Alkanes and Chemical Reactions

  2. Alkanes • Nomenclature • Physical Properties • Reactions • Structure and Conformations • Cycloalkanes • cis-trans isomerism • ring strain • conformations

  3. Alkanes • All C atoms are sp3. • Since there are no multiple bonds, alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons. • General formula for noncyclic alkanesis CnH2n+2. • The noncyclic alkanes are a homologous series, differing only by the number of methylene -CH2- groups.

  4. Nomenclature • We will learn the IUPAC (systematic) names of the alkanes. • Below is the template you will use to build the name of ANY organic compound.

  5. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Rule #1: Name the longest continuous chain (main chain) of C atoms. • When there are two chains of equal length, use the chain with the greatest number of substituents. methane CH4 ethane CH3CH3 propane CH3CH2CH3 butane CH3(CH2)2CH3 pentane CH3(CH2)3CH3 hexane CH3(CH2)4CH3 heptane CH3(CH2)5CH3 octane CH3(CH2)6CH3 nonane CH3(CH2)7CH3 decane CH3(CH2)8CH3

  6. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Rule #2: Number the main chain from the end nearest a substituent.

  7. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Using the line-angle structure can be helpful in naming a compound.

  8. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Rule #3: Name the substituent groups as alkyl groups. • Give the location as the number of the main chain C atom to which the substituent is attached. alkyl substituents you should know methyl -CH3 ethyl -CH2CH3 propyl -CH2CH2CH3 butyl -CH2(CH2)2CH3 t-butyl -C(CH3)3 isopropyl -CH(CH3)2 sec-butyl -CH(CH3)CH2CH3 isobutyl -CH2CH(CH3)2 neopentyl -CH2C(CH3)3

  9. Alkyl Substituents isobutyl isopropyl t-butyl sec-butyl neopentyl

  10. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Rule #4: If two or more substituents are present, list them in alphabetical order. • If more than one of the SAME substituent is present, use di-, tri-, tetra-, etc. • Do not alphabetize a hyphenated beginning. E.g., t-butyl is alphabetized as “b”, but isobutyl is “i”. • Do not alphabetize a numerical prefix. E.g., dimethyl is alphabetized as “m”.

  11. Nomenclature of Alkanes • 5-ethyl-2-methyl-4-propylheptane

  12. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Additional rule: • If each end of the longest chain has a substituent the same distance from the end, start with the end nearer to the second branch point. 3-chloro-2,5-dimethylhexane

  13. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Complex substituents • Find the longest chain from the point of attachment. • The C at the point of attachment is C #1. • Name as you would an alkane, but the ending is -yl. • Put the entire name in parentheses. 1-ethyl-2-methylpropyl (1-ethyl-2-methylpropyl)cyclopentane

  14. Nomenclature of Alkanes • Draw the line-angle structure for the following compounds: • 3, 3-dimethylpentane • 4-sec-butyl-2-methyloctane • 1, 2-dichloro-3-methylheptane

  15. Isomers • Two or more compounds that have the same molecular formula but different arrangements of atoms. • Two classes of isomers • Structural isomers • Molecules with different bonding patterns. • Stereoisomers (Unit 3)

  16. Structural Isomers CH3CH2CH2CH3 C4H10 butane C4H10 isobutane IUPAC name is methylpropane

  17. Structural Isomers Draw all of the structural isomers of C6H14.

  18. Physical Properties of Alkanes • Used as fuels, solvents, lubricants • Nonpolar • hydrophobic (water-hating) • Densities of n-alkanes ≈ 0.7 g/mL • Intermolecular force is dispersion (van der Waal’s), so bp’s increase with increasing surface area, as do mp’s of n-alkanes.

  19. Physical Properties of Alkanes • Boiling points • Straight-chain compounds will have the highest bp’s. • The more branched the chain, the more compact the molecule, and the lower the bp (due to smaller dispersion attractions).

  20. Physical Properties of Alkanes • Melting points of branched alkanes • The effect of branching on melting point is more difficult to predict.  For a given number of carbons, the more compact molecule will have the higher melting point. (Because it packs better.)

  21. Sources of Alkanes • Refining of crude oil • distillation followed by catalytic cracking (hydrocracking) • Natural gas • 70% methane, 10% ethane, 15% propane (plus small amounts of other compounds)

  22. Reactions of Alkanes • The most significant reaction of alkanes is combustion. CH3(CH2)8CH3 + 15.5 O2(g)  10CO2(g) + 11H2O(l) • Catalytic cracking • different from hydrocracking • Halogenation

  23. Structure and Conformations of Alkanes • C atoms are sp3 hybridized and bond angles are 109.5°. • Sigma bonds (σ bonds) • end-to-end overlap • rotation possible • conformations differ only in dihedral angle • conformations shown by Newman projections

  24. Newman Projections • Pick a C-C bond and look along that axis.* * Here’s where those modeling kits come in handy.

  25. Newman Projections of Ethane Conformations

  26. Torsional Strain • The eclipsed conformation has a higher energy than the other conformations, so there is some resistance to rotation. • This resistance is called torsionalstrain (or steric strain). • Ethane at room temperature has more than enough energy to overcome this resistance.

  27. Newman Projections of Butane Conformations anti is the lowest energy conformation.

  28. Conformations of Butane • More distinct conformations are possible. • The anti conformation has the lowest energy. • This is why we draw C skeletons as zigzag lines. • Gauche conformations are responsible for “kinks” in the C chain.

  29. Steric Hindrance • The totally eclipsed conformation of butane has a higher energy than its other conformations • due to torsional strain, aka steric strain, and sometimescalled steric hindrance. • The H atoms of the methyl groups are actually in each other’s way in the totally eclipsed conformation. • However, butane at room temperature has enough energy to rotate through the totally eclipsed conformation.

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