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Ch 24 From Petroleum to Pharmaceuticals Classes of Hydrocarbons
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AromaticAromaticAliphaticAliphatic
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AromaticAromaticAliphaticAliphatic AlkanesAlkanes AlkynesAlkynes AlkenesAlkenes
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AliphaticAliphatic AlkanesAlkanes Alkanes are hydrocarbons in which all of the bonds are single bonds. C C H H H HHH
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AliphaticAliphatic AlkenesAlkenes Alkenes are hydrocarbons that contain a carbon- carbon double bond. C C H H HH
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AliphaticAliphatic AlkynesAlkynes Alkynes are hydrocarbons that contain a carbon- carbon triple bond. HCCH
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HydrocarbonsHydrocarbons AromaticAromatic The most common aromatic hydrocarbons are those that contain a benzene ring. H H H HHH
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Reactive Sites in Hydrocarbons The Functional Group Concept
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Functional Group a structural unit in a molecule responsible for its characteristic chemical behavior and its spectroscopic characteristics
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AlkanesAlkanes functional group is a hydrogen atom the reaction that takes place is termed a substitution one of the hydrogens is substituted by some other atom or group, X R—H R—X
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AlkanesAlkanes functional group is a hydrogen the reaction that takes place is substitution one of the hydrogens is substituted by some other atom or group R—H R—X + Cl 2 C C H H H HHH + HCl C C H Cl H HHH
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Functional Groups in Hydrocarbons alkanesRH alkenes RH, double bond alkynes RH, triple bond aromaticsArH, double bond
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Some Key Functional Groups
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Families of organic compounds and their functional groups AlcoholsROH Alkyl halidesRX (X = F, Cl, Br, I) Aminesprimary amine: RNH 2 secondary amine: R 2 NH secondary amine: R 2 NH tertiary amine: R 3 N tertiary amine: R 3 N EthersROR
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Acyl group R
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Aldehyde R H
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Ketone R R'
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Carboxylic acid R OH
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Ester R OR'
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Many classes of organic compounds contain a carbonyl group O C Carbonyl group O C Amide R NH 2
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Introduction to Alkanes: Methane, CH 4 Ethane, C 2 H 6 Ethane, C 2 H 6 Propane, C 3 H 8 C n H 2n+2 General formula for an alkane
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The simplest alkanes Methane (CH 4 ) CH 4 Ethane (C 2 H 6 )CH 3 CH 3 Propane (C 3 H 8 )CH 3 CH 2 CH 3 bp -160°C bp -89°C bp -42°C No isomers possible for C1, C2, C 3 hydrocarbons
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Isomeric Alkanes: The Butanes C 4 H 10 General formula for any butane
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n-Butane Isobutane CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 (CH 3 ) 3 CH bp -0.4°C bp -10.2°C C 4 H 10
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Higher n-Alkanes Pentane (C 5 H 12 ) and Beyond C n H 2n+2 n > 4
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CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 n-Pentane n-Hexane CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 n-Heptane C n H 2n+2 n > 4
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The C 5 H 12 Isomers
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n-Pentane CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 Isopentane (CH 3 ) 2 CHCH 2 CH 3 Neopentane (CH 3 ) 4 C C 5 H 12
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The number of isomeric alkanes increases as the number of carbons increase. There is no simple way to predict how many isomers there are for a particular molecular formula. How many isomers?
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Table 2.3 Number of Constitutionally Isomeric Alkanes CH 4 1 C 2 H 6 1 C 3 H 8 1 C 4 H 10 2 C 5 H 12 3 C 6 H 14 5 C 7 H 16 9
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Table 2.3 Number of Constitutionally Isomeric Alkanes CH 4 1 C 8 H 18 18 C 2 H 6 1 C 9 H 20 35 C 3 H 8 1 C 10 H 22 75 C 4 H 10 2 C 15 H 32 4,347 C 5 H 12 3 C 20 H 42 366,319 C 6 H 14 5 C 40 H 82 62,491,178,805,831 C 7 H 16 9
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C 6 H 6 Isomers How many isomers with the composition C 6 H 6 can you draw?
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C 6 H 6 Isomers: How many isomers with the composition C 6 H 6 can you draw?
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Structure and Bonding in Alkenes
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Structure of Ethylene bond angles: H-C-H = 117° H-C-C = 121° bond distances: C—H = 110 pm C=C = 134 pm planar
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Bonding in Ethylene Framework of bonds Each carbon is sp 2 hybridized
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Bonding in Ethylene Each carbon has a half-filled p orbital
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Bonding in Ethylene Side-by-side overlap of half-filled p orbitals gives a bond
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Isomerism in Alkenes
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IsomersIsomers Isomers are different compounds that have the same molecular formula (composition).
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IsomersIsomers StereoisomersStereoisomers Constitutional isomers
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IsomersIsomers StereoisomersStereoisomers different connectivity same connectivity; different arrangement of atoms in space
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IsomersIsomers StereoisomersStereoisomers Constitutional isomers consider the isomeric alkenes of molecular formula C 4 H 8
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2-Methylpropene 1-Butene cis-2-Butene trans-2-Butene C CHH H CH 2 CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C C C CH 3 HH H C C H3CH3CH3CH3CH C C H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C
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2-Methylpropene 1-Butene cis-2-Butene C CHH H CH 2 CH 3 H CH 3 C C H3CH3CH3CH3CH C C H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C Constitutional isomers
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2-Methylpropene 1-Butene trans-2-Butene C CHH H CH 2 CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C C C CH 3 HH C C H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C Constitutional isomers
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cis-2-Butene trans-2-Butene H3CH3CH3CH3C C C CH 3 HH H C C H3CH3CH3CH3CH Stereoisomers
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Molecular Chirality: Enantiomers
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A molecule is chiral if its two mirror image forms are not superposable upon one another. A molecule is achiral if its two mirror image forms are superposable. ChiralityChirality
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Br Cl H F It cannot be superposed point for point on its mirror image. Bromochlorofluoromethane is chiral
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Br Cl H F H Cl Br F To show nonsuperposability, rotate this model 180° around a vertical axis. Bromochlorofluoromethane is chiral
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Br Cl H F H Cl Br F
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Another look
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are enantiomers with respect to each other and nonsuperposable mirror images are called enantiomers EnantiomersEnantiomers
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stereoisomers constitutionalisomers Isomers
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stereoisomers constitutionalisomers geometric isomers (cis/trans)enantiomers(optical) Isomers
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Chlorodifluoromethane is achiral
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The two structures are mirror images, but are not enantiomers, because they can be superposed on each other. Chlorodifluoromethane is achiral
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Symmetry in Achiral Structures
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Symmetry tests for achiral structures Any molecule with a plane of symmetry must be achiral.
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A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two mirror image halves. Chlorodifluoromethane has a plane of symmetry. Plane of symmetry
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A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two mirror image halves. Chlorodifluoromethane has a plane of symmetry. Plane of symmetry
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A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two mirror image halves. 1-Bromo-1-chloro-2-fluoroethene has a plane of symmetry. Plane of symmetry
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A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two mirror image halves. 1-Bromo-1-chloro-2-fluoroethene has a plane of symmetry. Plane of symmetry
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Physical Properties of Alkanes and Cycloalkanes
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increase with increasing number of carbons more atoms, more electrons, more opportunities for induced dipole-induced dipole forces decrease with chain branching branched molecules are more compact with smaller surface area—fewer points of contact with other molecules Boiling Points
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increase with increasing number of carbons more atoms, more electrons, more opportunities for induced dipole-induced dipole forces Boiling Points Heptane bp 98°C Octane bp 125°C Nonane bp 150°C
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decrease with chain branching branched molecules are more compact with smaller surface area—fewer points of contact with other molecules Boiling Points Octane: bp 125°C 2-Methylheptane: bp 118°C 2,2,3,3-Tetramethylbutane: bp 107°C
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Boiling Points of Alkanes governed by strength of intermolecular attractive forces alkanes are nonpolar, so dipole-dipole and dipole-induced dipole forces are absent only forces of intermolecular attraction are induced dipole-induced dipole forces
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – two nonpolar molecules center of positive charge and center of negative charge coincide in each
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – movement of electrons creates an instantaneous dipole in one molecule (left)
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – temporary dipole in one molecule (left) induces a complementary dipole in other molecule (right)
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – temporary dipole in one molecule (left) induces a complementary dipole in other molecule (right)
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – the result is a small attractive force between the two molecules
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Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces + – + – the result is a small attractive force between the two molecules
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Straight chain hydrocarbonBranched hydrocarbon Lots of intermolecular contacts Fewer intermolecular contacts
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