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Chapt 21 Hydrocarbons [Selected]
21.1 Introduction to Hydrocarbons 21.2 Alkanes [Straight-Chain Only] 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers [also with O]
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Section 21.1 Introduction to Hydrocarbons
Hydrocarbons are carbon-containing organic compounds that provide a source of energy and raw materials. Explain the terms organic compound and organic chemistry. Identify hydrocarbons Recognize the different ways that hydrocarbon molecules may be represented (molecular formula, structural formula, ball-and-stick model, etc.) and convert a molecular formula into a valid structural formula and vice versa, Distinguish between saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons.
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Section 21.1 Introduction to Hydrocarbons
Key Concepts Organic compounds contain the element carbon Hydrocarbons are organic substances composed of carbon and hydrogen. The major sources of hydrocarbons are petroleum and natural gas.
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Organic Compounds Name used because living organisms known to contain/produce them Term applied to all carbon-containing compounds except for a small number of compounds considered to be inorganic Because huge number exist, an entire branch of chemistry – organic chemistry – devoted to their study
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Essential Organic Chemistry
Bond – force that hold atoms together in compounds Carbon atom (C) always forms 4 bonds with other atoms; bond represented by a line C forms covalent bonds (a particular type of bond) Hydrogen can only form one bond
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Organic Compounds - Hydrocarbons
Simplest organic compounds; consist of only the elements carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) In hydrocarbon, C either attached (bonded) to another C or to a hydrogen Are thousands of hydrocarbons; can be in chain, branched chain, ring, and cage-like structures Major source of hydrocarbons – petroleum and natural gas (mostly CH4 – methane)
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Bond to some unspecified atom
Hydrocarbons Carbon atoms bond to each other by single, double, & triple bonds (always 4 total bonds) Saturated hydrocarbons contain only single bonds Unsaturated hydrocarbons contain at least one double or triple bond Bond to some unspecified atom Single Double Triple
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Simplest Hydrocarbon - Methane
Chemical (molecular) formula: CH4 Structural formula: C H Chemical bond Carbon atom with 4 bonds
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Simple Hydrocarbons - Methane
One carbon atom attached to 4 hydrogens Shape of carbon bonded to 4 other atoms is a tetrahedron – bond angles of 109.5 Hydrogens occupy corners of tetrahedron 109.5
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Ways of Representing Compounds
Compounds may be represented by various types of formulas and graphical presentations Variety of these shown on following slides Chemists use form that best shows information they wish to highlight Molecular formula most compact but no information about connections & geometry Structural show connections but no 3D info Most graphical forms can be generated and/or manipulated using online chemical software
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Ways of Representing Methane
Chemical (molecular) formula CH4 C H Structural formula Structural formula with additional geometry information – solid wedge coming toward you, dashed one away Ball & stick model Space-filling model
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Chapt 21 Hydrocarbons [Selected]
21.1 Introduction to Hydrocarbons 21.2 Alkanes 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers [also with O]
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Section Alkanes Alkanes are hydrocarbons that contain only single bonds. Name a straight-chain alkane from its molecular formula or by examining its structure (up to octane). Draw the structural formula or write the molecular formula of a straight-chain alkane when given its name (up to octane).
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Section 21.2 Alkanes Key Concepts
Alkanes contain only single bonds between carbon atoms. Alkanes and other organic compounds are best represented by structural formulas and can be named using systematic rules determined by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). Alkanes that contain hydrocarbon rings are called cyclic alkanes.
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Alkanes Simple Alkanes – hydrocarbons with only single bonds and no ring structures All have formula CnH2n+2 n = integer All have names ending in “ane” Simplest possible hydrocarbon = methane Chemical (molecular) formula: CH4 Structural formula: C H Chemical bond Carbon atom with 4 bonds
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Alkanes All have formula CnH2n+2 n = integer n = 2 ethane
Chemical (molecular) formula: C2H6 Structural formula: n = 3 propane Chemical (molecular) formula: C3H8 C H C H
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“Constructing” Alkanes Stepwise
Can think of alkanes larger than methane as being built from smaller molecules by adding a methyl group: CH3 Process: 1) Remove H atom (leave bond) 2) Replace removed atom with CH3 If start with CH4, four possible choices for H to remove, but all choices result in exactly the same molecule, ethane = C2H6
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Making Ethane (C2H6) From CH4
methane CH4 methyl group: CH3 ethane C2H6
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Ethane Can write formula as C2H6 or as CH3CH3
As represented by skeletal formula Can write formula as C2H6 or as CH3CH3 Latter method allows one to visualize and draw structure more easily Additional very compact representation possible – skeletal (aka line-angle or bond line) formula Bonds are lines (as before) Carbon atoms present where line begins or ends or where 2 lines meet H not shown unless attached to drawn atom
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Ethane Most alkanes rotate freely about the single bond between carbon atoms
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Single Bond Free Rotation
Free rotation occurs about single bonds Consequence of free rotation: 2 molecules that may appear different when drawn may in fact be identical because one molecule may be twisted about its single bonds to have the exact same shape as the 2nd molecule
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Two Equivalent Butane Molecules
Right hand structure is twisted version of left hand structure 22
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Single Bond Free Rotation
Free rotation occurs about single bonds Because of free rotation all six hydrogen atoms in ethane are equivalent If making new compound from ethane by replacing a hydrogen, doesn’t matter which one is chosen – result will be the same
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Making Propane (C3H8) From Ethane
Ethane: C2H6 Note: “straight” chain shown in structural formula isn’t methyl group: CH3 As represented by skeletal formula Propane: C3H8 or CH3CH2CH3
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Straight-Chain Alkanes
n = 3 propane Propane: Molecular formula: C3H8 Structural formula: For n > 3, it makes a difference which carbon the next methyl group is added For straight-chain alkanes, next methyl always added to an end carbon – structural formula (untwisted) has all carbons in a line C H
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Simple Hydrocarbons - Alkanes
Condensed formula helps to see structure Butane C4 shown as straight-chain isomer Type of Formula Molecular Structural Ball-and-Stick Space Fill Condensed CH3CH3 CH3CH2CH3 CH3CH2CH2CH3
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Hydrocarbons – Straight-Chain Alkanes
Type of Formula Name Molecular Condensed
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Chapt 21 Hydrocarbons [Selected]
21.1 Introduction to Hydrocarbons 21.2 Alkanes [Straight-Chain Only] 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers [also with O]
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Section 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers
Some hydrocarbons [and other compounds] have the same molecular formula but have different molecular structures. Define the terms isomer, structural isomer, and stereoisomer. Categorize molecular structures as being structural isomers, stereoisomers or as not being isomers. Distinguish between geometric (diastereomers) and optical isomers (enantiomers) Differentiate between geometric isomers with cis- and trans prefixes. Describe describe the structural characteristics that are associated with optical isomers
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Section 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers
Some hydrocarbons [and other compounds] have the same molecular formula but have different molecular structures. Generate isomers of compounds containing oxygen in addition to carbon and hydrogen
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Section 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers
Key Concepts Isomers are two or more compounds with the same molecular formula but different molecular structures. Structural isomers differ in the order in which atoms are bonded to each other. Stereoisomers have all atoms bonded in the same order but arranged differently in space; stereoisomers can either be optical isomers (enantiomers) or not (diastereomers) Stereoisomers which are non-superimposable mirror images of each other are called optical isomers Some diastereomers are geometric isomers; these are associated with carbon compounds containing double bonds
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Section 21.4 Hydrocarbon Isomers
Key Concepts When oxygen is present in a compound with carbon and hydrogen, isomers can involve hydroxy (-OH), ether (-O-) and carbonyl (C=O) groupings
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Formulas for Compounds - Isomers
Isomers – different compounds which have the same chemical formula 2 main categories: structural (aka constitutional) isomers and stereoisomers (aka configurational) Structural isomer - atoms bonded in different order Stereoisomer – atoms bonded in same order but differ in spatial orientation # of isomers increase as # of atoms increase Good web resources at:
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Structural (Constitutional)
Types of Isomers All Isomers Structural (Constitutional) Stereoisomers (Configurational) Diastereomers Enantiomers (optical) Geometric (Cis-trans) Other diastereomers (>1 chiral centers)
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Butane – Structural Isomers
Butane, C4H10 - smallest alkane to have isomers (has two) Unlike construction of ethane and propane, choice of which H in propane to replace with a methyl group makes a difference Two possible choices generate two structural isomers – carbons connected to each other differently Structural isomers differ in physical and chemical properties
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Making Butane (C4H10) From Propane
or propane (C3H8)
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Two Equivalent n-Butane Molecules
Right hand structure is twisted version of left hand molecule 37
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Butane - Bond Rotations (not isomers)
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Butane C4H10. = Not isomers – carbons connected in same way and forms can convert from one to the other by rotating around a bond = Structural isomers – carbons connected in different way; bond must be broken to convert one form into the other
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Structural Isomers of C4H10
Butane, BP = 0°C Isobutane, BP = -12°C 40
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Butane (C4H10) Skeletal Formula Structural Formula Other n-butane
straight chain CH3CH2CH2CH3 Butane (C4H10) iso-butane branched CH3CH(CH3)CH3
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n-Butane CH3CH2CH2CH3
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Making Pentane (C5H12) From Butane
At first glance, appear to be 4 isomers - but 3 isomers remain
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The 3 Structural Isomers of Pentane
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Structural Isomers of C5H12 (Pentane)
n-pentane isopentane neopentane Longest continuous carbon chain: pentane 5 isopentane 4 neopentane 3
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Alkane Isomers – Alternate Strategy
Rather than building new isomers by adding a methyl group to known isomers of a particular alkane, the following slides illustrate an alternative approach Draw straight chain version of alkane of interest Break one or more carbon-carbon bonds and rearrange the pieces Check that new molecules don’t repeat existing ones (reflection, rotation)
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Structural Isomers of Hexane (C6H14)
Start: connect carbons in a line Break bonds & rearrange to get other isomers 47
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Hexane (C6H14) Isomers Showing H Atoms
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Hexane (C6H14) Isomers In Skeleton Form
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Structural Isomers of Hexane (C6H14)
2 3 1 4 5 2 3 1 2 3 5 4 4 5
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Boiling Points - Hexane Isomers
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Structural Isomers of Hexane (C6H14) Site has rotatable models with display options
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# of Alkane (CnH2n+2) Structural Isomers
Molecular Formula Possible # Isomers C4H10 2 C11H24 159 C5H12 3 C12H32 355 C6H14 5 C15H32 4,347 C7H16 9 C20H42 366,319 C8H18 18 C30H62 4,111,846,763 C9H20 35 C40H82 62,481,801,147,341 C10H22 75
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Structural (Constitutional)
Types of Isomers All Isomers Structural (Constitutional) Stereoisomers (Configurational) Diastereomers Enantiomers (optical) Geometric (Cis-trans) Other diastereomers (>1 chiral centers)
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Enantiomers - Optical Isomers
Tied to concept of non superimposable mirror images Familiar example – hands: left & right hands are mirror images but do not superimpose
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Superimposable Mirror Images
Some molecules are like socks - two socks from pair are mirror images that are superimposable (sock and its mirror image are identical) Molecule/object that is superimposable on its mirror image is achiral; it is chiral if it is not superimposable on its mirror image
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Superimposable Mirror Images
All molecules have a mirror image – but for many molecules it is the same molecule (achiral) 57
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Achiral Examples
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Nonsuperimposable Mirror Images
Mirror image cannot be rotated so all its atoms align with same atoms of original molecule – i.e., mirror image is not superimposable on original 59
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Non-Superimposable Mirror Images
Only when C attached to 4 different groups When this occurs, C variously referred to as a chiral center, asymmetric carbon, stereogenic center, or stereocenter 60
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Identifying Chiral Centers
Examine each tetrahedral carbon atom and look at four groups (not the four atoms) bonded to it If groups all different, have a chiral (stereogenic) center
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Chiral Molecules - Entantiomers
A pair of nonsuperimposable mirror images are called a pair of enantiomers – these molecules will be optical isomers of each other 62
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Chirality – Optical Isomers
Louis Pasteur discovered 2 forms of crystallized tartaric acid; forms were mirror images of each other called right and left-handed forms
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Non-Superimposable Mirror Images
Chiral molecule – mirror images are enantiomers (optical isomers)
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Non-Superimposable Mirror Images
Chiral molecule – mirror images are enantiomers (optical isomers) 65
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Non-Superimposable Mirror Images
2-chlorobutane
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Non-Superimposable Mirror Images
butan-2-ol
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Return to Heptane – Optical Isomers
Earlier in presentation, structural isomers of heptane (C7H14) were determined Some of these isomers are optically active (following slide)
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Structural Isomers of C7H16 (Heptane)
* * Isomers marked with * have asymmetric carbons (have enantiomers – optical isomers)
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Optical Isomers of 3-methylhexane
Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach 70 70
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Properties of Optical Isomers
Optical isomers have the same physical* and chemical properties except in chemical reactions where chirality is important Chiral molecules often react differently with other chiral molecules; similar to idea that right hand does not fit a left handed glove – molecule must be correct shape to fit molecule it is reacting with * Except for their rotation of polarized light
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Impact of Chirality Many natural molecules are chiral and most natural reactions are affected by optical isomerism; most amino acids are chiral Many drugs are optically active, with only one enantiomer having the beneficial effect For some drugs, other enantiomer can even be harmful, e.g. thalidomide
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Structural (Constitutional)
Types of Isomers All Isomers Structural (Constitutional) Stereoisomers (Configurational) Diastereomers Enantiomers (optical) Geometric (Cis-trans) Other diastereomers (>1 chiral centers)
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Structural (Constitutional)
Types of Isomers All Isomers Structural (Constitutional) Stereoisomers (Configurational) Diastereomers Enantiomers (optical) Geometric (Cis-trans) Other diastereomers (>1 chiral centers)
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Stereoisomers – No Chiral Centers
Single covalent bonds can easily rotate - what appears to be a different structure is not All structures above are the same (not isomers) because C-C bonds have free rotation
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Stereoisomers – No Chiral Centers
A double bond between carbon atoms prevents free rotation – structure is locked into place
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Stereoisomers – No Chiral Centers
Groups can on same or opposite sides of double bond – diastereomers (spatially different but not mirror images)
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Geometrical Isomers When double bonds involved, diastereomers are referred to as geometrical isomers Although cis and trans modifiers to names are traditional, official naming system uses E and Z modifiers
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Isomers with CHO Compounds
With carbon, hydrogen and oxygen (CHO) present, isomers become more varied Rule: O in these compounds forms 2 bonds For simplicity, limit scope to single oxygen O found in form of alcohol (COH), ether (COC), or carbonyl (C=O) group Look at: C3H8O, C4H10O, C5H12O, C3H6O Latter departs from other examples – rings and double bonds present
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Isomers of C3H8O 2 structural isomers in form of alcohol
1 structural isomer in form of ether ethyl methyl ether propan-1-ol propan-2-ol
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Isomers of C4H10O * 4 structural isomers in form of alcohol butan-1-ol
2-methylpropan-1-ol butan-2-ol 2-methylpropan-2-ol * * chiral center
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Isomers of C4H10O 3 structural isomers in form of ether
1-methoxypropane diethyl ether 2-methoxypropane
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1 chiral center 2 optical isomers
Isomers of C4H10O 1 chiral center 2 optical isomers (2S)-butan-2-ol butan-2-ol * (2R)-butan-2-ol
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Isomers of C4H10O 8 total isomers
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Summary – Isomers of C4H10O
4 structural isomers in form of alcohol 1 alcohol has a chiral center 2 enantiomers (optical isomers) 5 total isomers in form of alcohol 3 structural isomers in form of ether 0 chiral centers 3 total isomers in form of ether 8 total isomers (7 structural)
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# of CnH2n+2O Structural Isomers
Molecular Formula Possible # Isomers C2H6O 2 C9H20O 405 C3H8O 3 C10H22O 989 C4H10O 7 C11H24O ~2430 C5H12O 14 C12H32O ~6070 C6H14O 32 C7H16O 72 C8H18O 171
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Summary – Isomers Structural Isomers
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