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Organic Chemistry - Alkanes: Hydrocarbons (Compounds Containing Only C and H)

1) Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons with the general formula CnH2n+2. They undergo substitution reactions like halogenation and exhibit structural isomerism when branched. 2) Alkanes are named by identifying the parent chain and substituents. Physical properties like boiling point depend on molecular mass and structure. 3) Combustion of alkanes produces carbon dioxide, water and sometimes carbon monoxide. Halogenation occurs by free radical substitution.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
143 views6 pages

Organic Chemistry - Alkanes: Hydrocarbons (Compounds Containing Only C and H)

1) Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons with the general formula CnH2n+2. They undergo substitution reactions like halogenation and exhibit structural isomerism when branched. 2) Alkanes are named by identifying the parent chain and substituents. Physical properties like boiling point depend on molecular mass and structure. 3) Combustion of alkanes produces carbon dioxide, water and sometimes carbon monoxide. Halogenation occurs by free radical substitution.

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Jojo Leong
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Organic Chemistry – Alkanes


Hydrocarbons (compounds containing only C and H)
.............................................|.....................................................

Aliphatic Hydrocarbon Alicylic Hydrocarbon Aromatic Hydrocarbon or


Arenes
1. Alkanes 1. Cycloalkanes 1. Benzene
2. Alkenes 2. Cycloalkenes 2. Benzene and its
derivatives
3. Naphthalene and
others

 Alkanes belong to the homologous series of saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons, with general
formula CnH2n+2

 Structural isomerism exists in alkanes containing more than 3 C atoms due to branching of
chains

Nomenclature of branched chain isomers

Step 1 Identify the parent chain (largest continuous C chain) and name the compound
after it

Step 2 Identify substituents of parent chain which are alkyl groups (general formula of
CnH2n+1)

Step 3 Determine the position of alkyl group by numbering the C atoms consecutively
from one end of the parent chain to the other

 The number is such that a smaller digit is given to the C attached to the substituent
 If some alkyl groups occur more than once as substituents, indicate prefix di-, tri-, tetra-,
etc
 Arrange substituents in alphabetical order or increasing size, ignoring the prefixes
2

Cycloalkanes

 The chemical behavior of cycloalkanes is similar to the open-chain alkanes

Physical Properties

 Insoluble in water but soluble in benzene, ether and other non-polar solvents (e.g. CCl4)

 Less dense than water

 Viscosity of liquid alkanes increase with increasing molecular mass as long molecules have
higher tendency to become ‘tangled up’ with one another (or less likely to slide over each
other)
3

 Boiling point of straight chain alkanes increases with no of C atoms due to increasing
strength of dispersion forces

 Melting point of straight chain alkanes increases in a zig-zag pattern due to intermolecular
forces in a crystal, which depend not only on size of molecules but also how well they pack
into a crystal lattice

 At room temperature and atmospheric pressure, the first 4 alkanes (C1 – C4) are gases; the
next 13 alkanes (C5 – C17) are liquids and the C18 or more are solids

 Branched chain isomers have a lower boiling point than straight chain isomers
 Reason: Branched molecules are more spherical and hence packed less closely with the
resultant decrease in dispersion forces

 Effect of branching on packing and on melting point is irregular

Preparation

Hydrogenation of Alkenes

 Alkene is reacted with hydrogen gas at 140oC using Ni catalyst

 No heat is needed if Pt or Pd are used at catalyst (i.e. reaction can occur at r.t.p.)

Reactions

Combustion

 In limited supply of oxygen, incomplete combustion takes place to produce CO or C and


H2O

 In unlimited supply of oxygen, complete combustion takes place to produce CO2 and H2O

Note:

 Reaction is exothermic

 The ease of burning accounts for the use of many alkanes as fuels

 Methane (natural gas or cooking gas) burns with a clean blue flame tinged with a little
yellow. Very little ‘soot’ (carbon) is formed

 Burning of higher alkanes produce sooty flames

 Complete combustion of hydrocarbons provides the basis for quantitative analysis


4

( 4y )O → xC O +( 2y ) H O
C x H y+ x + 2 2 2

Halogenoalkanes

R-H + X2 200−400 ° C∨UV



light R-X + H-X where X = Cl, Br, I

Free Radical Substitution

 UV light or high temperature is needed to generate the free radical

 It is a chain reaction involving 3 basic steps: initiation, propagation and termination

Example: chlorination of methane via free radical substitution mechanism

Initiation

Heat or light provides energy for the homolytic cleavage of Cl–Cl bond to generate free radicals

Cl – Cl UV →
light 2Cl•

Propagation

Each step consumes a radical and generates another. Together, 2 propagation steps consume
one CH4 molecule and one Cl2 molecule and produce one HCl molecule and one CH3Cl
molecule, giving the net reaction

Cl• + CH4  •CH3 + HCl


•CH3 + Cl2  Cl• + CH3Cl

Termination

Free radicals are consumed but not generated

2Cl•  Cl2
•CH3 + •CH3  CH3CH3 (when [•CH3] is high)
•CH3 + •Cl  CH3Cl

Overall, C l 2 +C H 4 UV light HCl+C H 3 Cl


Note:

 A single free radical (once formed) can produce a large number of molecules of product by
chain reaction sequence
5

 The reaction does not stop at this step (monosubstitution). More than one H atom in the
alkane can be replaced by Cl with elimination of Cl  reaction is not clean as it does not
give a single organic product
Specif
 Monosubstituted alkane, CH3Cl, predominates if excess of alkane is used y the
exces
 Fully substituted alkane, CCl4, predominates with an excess of Cl2 s
reage
nt

 Unlike CH4, C2H6 and higher alkanes give rise to isomeric halogen derivatives when more
than one H atom is substituted. Reactions tend to be indiscriminate due to little difference
between the strengths of the differently situated C-H bonds

Reactivity

 F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2

 F2: reaction proceeds with explosive violence and cannot be used in the lab
 Cl2 and Br2: reaction at 250 - 400oC or UV light
 I2: least reactive as I atoms do not react with alkanes

Environmental Pollutants

 Car exhausts emissions contain:

 Unburnt hydrocarbons due to incomplete combustion of fuel. In strong sunlight it becomes


smog and can cause lung damage

 Carbon monoxide due to incomplete combustion of fuel. CO combines with haemoglobin in


blood and reduces the oxygen-carrying ability of the haemoglobin and can lead to death

 Nitrogen oxides from the reaction of N2 and O2 in the car’s engines can cause acid rain

Catalytic Converters

 In many countries, pollution from motor cars is being reduced by fitting a platinum catalyst
converter onto the motor car exhausts

 It oxidizes CO and unburnt hydrocarbons to CO2 and H2O, and it reduces NOx to N2 and O2

 The catalytic converter can be poisoned by lead, which can explains why lead-free petrol is
used

Note:
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 In accounting for the probability of theoretical yield of where H is substituted, count the
number of positions on the C atom which the H can be substituted and divide it by the total
number of positions

 Radical stability will determine the products. The more stable the radical, the more likely to
form a product due to the more stable radical.

Most stable Least stable

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