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Chapter 6 Reactions of Alkenes: Addition Reactions.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Reactions of Alkenes: Addition Reactions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Reactions of Alkenes: Addition Reactions

2 The characteristic reaction of alkenes is addition to the double bond. + A—B C C A C C B Reactions of Alkenes

3 6.1 Hydrogenation of Alkenes

4 + H—H    exothermic  H° = –136 kJ/mol catalyzed by finely divided Pt, Pd, Rh, Ni C C H C CHHHH H HH HH Hydrogenation of Ethylene

5 H 2, Pt (73%) Example CH 2 H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C CH 3 H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C

6 What three alkenes yield 2-methylbutane on catalytic hydrogenation? Problem 6.1

7 What three alkenes yield 2-methylbutane on catalytic hydrogenation? H 2, Pt Problem 6.1

8 HH C C ABX Y HH Mechanism of Catalytic Hydrogenation: Figure 6.1

9 H C C A B X Y HHH

10 H HHH C C ABX Y

11 H HHH C C A B X Y

12 HH H C C ABX Y H

13 HH H C C ABX Y H

14 can be used to measure relative stability of isomeric alkenes correlation with structure is same as when heats of combustion are measured 6.2 Heats of Hydrogenation

15 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 126126 119119 115115 Heats of Hydrogenation of Isomers

16 Ethylene136 Monosubstituted125-126 cis-Disubstituted117-119 trans-Disubstituted114-115 Terminally disubstituted116-117 Trisubstituted112 Tetrasubstituted110 Heats of Hydrogenation (kJ/mol)

17 Match each alkene of Problem 6.1 with its correct heat of hydrogenation. 126 kJ/mol 118 kJ/mol 112 kJ/mol Problem 6.2

18 Match each alkene of Problem 6.1 with its correct heat of hydrogenation. 126 kJ/mol 118 kJ/mol 112 kJ/mol highest heat of hydrogenation; least stable isomer lowest heat of hydrogenation; most stable isomer Problem 6.2

19 6.3 Stereochemistry of Alkene Hydrogenation

20 Two spatial (stereochemical) aspects of alkene hydrogenation: syn addition of both H atoms to double bond hydrogenation is stereoselective, corresponding to addition to less crowded face of double bond

21 syn addition anti addition syn-Additon versus anti-Addition

22 CO 2 CH 3 (100%) H 2, Pt Example of Syn Addition CO 2 CH 3 HH

23 A reaction in which a single starting material can give two or more stereoisomeric products but yields one of them in greater amounts than the other (or even to the exclusion of the other) is said to be stereoselective. Stereoselectivity

24 H3CH3CH3CH3C CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C H H 2, cat Both products correspond to syn addition of H 2. Example of Stereoselective Reaction CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H H

25 H 2, cat But only this one is formed. Example of Stereoselective Reaction H3CH3CH3CH3C CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H H

26 H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H 2, cat Top face of double bond blocked by this methyl group Example of Stereoselective Reaction

27 H 2, cat H 2 adds to bottom face of double bond. Example of Stereoselective Reaction CH 3 H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H H H H3CH3CH3CH3C H3CH3CH3CH3C H


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