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Chapter 2: Alkanes
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Alkanes from Carbon and Hydrogen
Alkanes are carbon compounds that contain only single bonds. The simplest alkanes are hydrocarbons – compounds that contain only carbon and hydrogen. Hydrocarbons are used mainly as fuels, solvents and lubricants:
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Hydrocarbons
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Hydrocarbons
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Hydrocarbons
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Hydrocarbons
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Hydrocarbons
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IUPAC System of Naming Organic Compounds
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IUPAC System of Naming Organic Compounds
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Naming Branches as “Groups”
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Naming Branches as “Groups”
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Structural Isomers How many structural isomers – compounds with the same chemical formula but different connectivity – are there with the formula C7H16?
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Structural Isomers How many structural isomers – compounds with the same chemical formula but different connectivity – are there with the formula C7H16?
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Methyl and Ethyl Compounds
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Methyl and Ethyl Compounds
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Propyl Compounds
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Structural Isomers of C7H16
Cycloheptane contains two fewer hydrogens than heptane. They are not structural isomers.
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Cycloalkanes
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Naming Cycloalkanes Unlike "floppy" chains, rings have an additional consideration for multiple substitutions: The above compounds are not structural isomers. Their connectivity is identical. They are stereoisomers – compounds that differ in how substituents are arranged in space
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Naming Cycloalkanes
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Naming Cycloalkanes
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3-Dimensional Structure/VSEPR Theory
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3-Dimensional Structure
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3-Dimensional Structure
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3-Dimensional Structure
Molecules that differ by only rotations around single bonds are conformational Isomers.
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3-Dimensional Structure
How can these molecular shapes arise from bonding between the available orbitals?
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Hybridization
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Hybridization
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Hybridization
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