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Saturated hydrocarbons

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Title: Saturated hydrocarbons


1
Saturated hydrocarbons
  • Chapter 12

2
Organic and inorganic compounds
  • Organic chemistry concerns the chemistry of
    carbon compounds ? contain C and H, but also
    maybe other p-block elements.
  • At the time of printing (Stoker, 5th edition),
    there were around 5 million organic compounds
    catalogued
  • Inorganic chemistry concerns the chemistry of the
    other 117 elements. Around 1.5 million of these
    are known

Non-polar hydrocarbon tail
A polar, charged group
3
Organic and inorganic compounds
  • The reason why there are so many organic
    compounds is that carbon is very good at forming
    bonds with other carbon atoms.
  • Carbon atoms are commonly found in chain-like
    arrangements or C-rings (or both within the same
    molecule).
  • Carbon has four valence electrons. In organic
    compounds, it forms four covalent bonds to obtain
    an octet.

4
Hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives
  • Hydrocarbons are compounds that contain only
    carbon and hydrogen in their formulas.
  • Two basic categories of hydrocarbon
  • Saturated hydrocarbons all carbon atoms are
    connected together with single bonds
  • Unsaturated hydrocarbons involve one or more
    multiple (double, triple) C-C bonds
  • Hydrocarbon derivatives contain carbon and
    hydrogen, and one or more other elements (P, N,
    O, Cl, etc.)

5
Hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives
  • Saturated hydrocarbons may be found in two
    possible formats

6
Alkanes acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
  • An alkane is a saturated hydrocarbon that is
    acyclic (does not possess ring-structure).
  • Because all C-C bonds are single bonds (and
    because the other bonds that carbon needs to get
    an octet are to H-toms), alkanes have the general
    formula CnH2n2 (n of C-atoms)

Examples of alkanes CH4 C2H6 C3H8
7
Alkanes acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
  • In an alkane, each carbon is tetrahedral (it has
    four bonds to other atoms. Rem VSEPR)

CH4
C2H6
C3H8
8
Alkanes acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
  • Chemical formulas for alkanes are written as
    CnH2n2 however, structural formulas give more
    information.
  • Chemical formula reveals the type and number of
    each element in the compound
  • Structural formulas show how each atom in the
    molecule is connected

expanded structural formula
condensed structural formula
name
9
Alkanes acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
  • For longer carbon chains, an abbreviated,
    condensed structural formula is advantageous, as
    it shows most of the information of the expanded
    formula without taking up as much space

6 CH2- units between two CH3-groups
An 8-carbon chain (two CH3-groups linked by a
6-carbon chain (6-CH2- units)
10
Alkanes acyclic saturated hydrocarbons
  • Sometimes, a simple skeletal structural formula
    can be used to convey hydrocarbon structure

mean the same thing
11
Alkane isomerism
  • The types of alkanes weve considered so far
    involve straight chain types, where the carbon
    atoms form a continuous series (i.e. no
    branches).
  • When alkanes having four or more carbons are
    considered, there is more than one structural
    formula that can be used to describe a given
    molecular formula.

12
Alkane isomerism
  • The formula C4H10 can be represented by the
    following condensed structural formulas

These compounds possess the same chemical
formula, but differ in the way the atoms are
arranged (isomers)
13
Alkane isomerism
  • The C4H10 shown on the left is called a
    continuous chain alkane (or an unbranched/straigh
    t-chain alkane).
  • The one on the right is called a branched-chain
    alkane

These are called constitutional isomers which
differ in their atom-to-atom connectivity
14
Alkane isomerism
  • As the number of carbon atoms in the alkane
    grows, so do the number of possible isomers.

15
Conformations of alkanes
  • The carbon-carbon bonds in alkanes permit
    rotation of each carbon-group with respect to the
    others that are chemically bound to it.

16
Conformations of alkanes
  • Conformations are specific, 3-dimensional
    arrangements of atoms in organic molecules (at
    some instant) that result from rotation about C-C
    single bonds.
  • Several conformations of a six-carbon chain are
    shown using the skeletal structures below

All the same molecule C6H14
17
Conformations of alkanes
  • Note that the following two skeletal structures
    describe two different alkanes

Alkane on the left is a 6-carbon, continuous
chain structure. Alkane on the right is a
branched structure (a 5-carbon, continuous chain
that has a 1-carbon branch)
18
Conformations of alkanes
  • Do the following pairs of condensed structural
    formulas describe the same alkane?

19
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • The names that have been shown for the branched
    alkanes so far are common names (made as these
    compounds were identified).
  • As the number of organic compounds catalogued
    grew, a system for naming was developed by the
    International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
    (IUPAC).
  • The basic system used is one that employs a
    prefix-type name.

20
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • Names for continuous chain alkanes (first ten)
    are shown below. The names use a prefix (e.g.
    meth-) to designate the number of carbon atoms in
    the chain.

Alkanes have ane at the end of their name
Prefix
Meth- Eth- Prop- But- Pent- Hex- Hept- Oct- Non- D
ec-
21
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • Branched-chain alkanes can be described as
    continuous-chain alkanes with branches
    (substituents).
  • The IUPAC system of naming branched-chain alkanes
    describes the type and location of substituents
    before the name of the longest, continuous chain
    of carbon atoms in the alkane.

Substituents are the branches in branched-chain
alkanes. They are atoms (or groups of atoms for
the kind well look at first) that hang off the
main carbon chain.
22
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • Substituents in branched-chain alkanes are called
    alkyl groups. An alkyl group is the group of
    atoms that would be created by removing a
    hydrogen atom from an alkane. They are named
    according to the alkane from which they are
    derived.

To get the substituent name take the alkane name
and replace the ane part with yl
23
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • To name a branched alkane, follow these steps
  • 1) Identify the longest, continuous carbon chain
    in the structure. This will be the base of the
    branched alkanes name.

So far, we know this compound is going to be
called some kind of butane)
24
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • 2) Number this chain in a way that gives the
    carbon(s) with the substituent the lowest
    possible, overall numbering.
  • The methyl substituent is thus located on C-2
    (carbon-2)

(something something butane)
25
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • After locating the alkyl substituent by number,
    prefix the parent-chain alkane name (the longest,
    continuous carbon chain) with the number and the
    name of the substituent

2-Methylbutane
Separate the number from the substituent name
with a hyphen, and the last substituent name
reads directly into the parent chain alkane name
26
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • Another example
  1. Find the longest, continuous chain of C-atoms
  2. Number them in a way that gives all substituents
    the lowest total numbering
  3. Prefix the name of the parent alkane with the
    number and name of the substituent

27
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • One with multiple substituents

2,3,4-Trimethylhexane
In cases where multiple substituents of the same
type are present, prefix the substituent name
with di-, tri-, tetra-, etc. to indicate how many
of them are present
28
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • If more than one kind of substituent is present,
    the alphabetic order of the substituents take
    priority over the number of the substituent when
    numbering the parent chain

Separate different substituents with hyphens
3-Ethyl-4,5-dipropyloctane
3-Ethyl-2-methylhexane (not 2-Methyl-3-ethylhexane
)
The prefix part of the propyl substituents are
not counted for alphabetical ordering
(come back to this structure later)
29
IUPAC nomenclature for alkanes
  • IUPAC punctuation rules
  • Separate numbers from letters with hyphens
  • Separate numbers from other numbers with commas
  • Dont separate the last substituent name from the
    parent alkane chain

2
4-Ethyl-2,3-dimethyl-5-propylnonane
3
1
30
Line-angle structural formulas for alkanes
  • Line-angle structural formulas describe
    carbon-carbon bonds with straight lines (each
    point in the diagram represents a carbon atom
    with four bonds to carbon(s) and hydrogen(s)
    around it)

It is understood that each C-atom has four bonds
C-H bonds are there, but not shown
31
Classification of carbon atoms
  • The carbon atoms in organic structures are
    classified as primary, secondary, tertiary, or
    quaternary, depending on the number of other
    carbon atoms bound to them.
  • Primary (1o) C bounds to one other C-atom
  • Secondary (2o) C bound to two other C-atoms
  • Tertiary (3o) C bound to three other C-atoms
  • Quaternary (4o) C bound to four other C-atoms

1o
3o
4o
2o
32
Branched-chain alkyl groups
  • Sometimes, branched-chain substituents are
    encountered. These are named according to the
    parent alkane from which they are derived.

Substituent derives from a 4-C alkane (butane)
and point of attachment is a tertiary C of the
alkane
Substituent derives from a 3-C alkane (propane)
and point of attachment is a secondary C of the
alkane
4-Isopropyloctane
4-tert-Butyloctane
could also call this 4-sec-Propyloctane
33
Branched-chain alkyl groups
another point for the purposes of
capitalization (at the beginning of the name),
tert- and sec-are not capitalized, but iso is
4-Isopropyloctane
4-tert-Butyloctane
34
Branched-chain alkyl groups
  • Given a choice between unbranched substituents
    and branched substituents, use unbranched ones
    for naming

3-Ethyl-2-methylhexane (not 2-Methyl-3-ethylhexane
)
also, not 3-Isopropylhexane
35
Cycloalkanes
  • Cyclic alkanes (cycloalkanes) are alkane chains
    where the end carbons are linked together (need
    to kick off 2 H atoms from the formula of the
    corresponding straight-chain alkane to get the
    cycloalkane formula).
  • The general formula for a cycloalkane is CnH2n

36
Cycloalkanes
37
IUPAC nomenclature for substituted cycloalkanes
  • If one substituent exists on a cycloalkane, no
    numbering is needed to denote its location

Ethylcyclohexane
38
IUPAC nomenclature for substituted cycloalkanes
  • If two substituents are present, the ring is
    numbered follows alphabetic priority.
  • If more than two substituents are present, the
    ring numbering is assigned in a way that gives
    the lowest overall substituent numbers (order
    they are reported in is still alphabetic)

1-Ethyl-2-methylcyclohexane
2-Ethyl-1-methyl-4-propylcyclohexane (not
1-Ethyl-2-methyl-5-propylcyclohexane or
1-Methyl-2-ethyl-4-propylcyclohexane)
39
Isomerism in cycloalkanes
  • Constitutional isomers are possible for
    cycloalkanes having four or more carbons

These isomers differ in the way the carbon
atoms are connected together (constitutional
isomers)
40
Isomerism in cycloalkanes
  • As before, as the number of carbons in the
    (cyclo)alkane grows, so do the number of
    constitutional isomers.

41
Isomerism in cycloalkanes
  • Another kind of isomerism we havent yet
    encountered, called stereoisomerism, involves
    molecules that have the same molecular formula,
    same atom-to-atom connectivity, but differ in the
    3-dimensional arrangement of the atoms in space.
  • In cycoalkanes, there may exist the possibility
    of cis-, trans- isomers

42
Isomerism in cycloalkanes
  • There are two distinct molecules. One cant be
    converted into the other without breaking bonds
    first.
  • Can have this form of isomerism for any
    cycloalkane that has more than one substituent.

43
Isomerism in cycloalkanes
  • Substituents also dont need to be on adjacent
    carbon atoms of the ring (but cant be on the
    same carbon atom of the ring)

44
Sources of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • The crude petroleum that is obtained at drilling
    sites is a mixture of hydrocarbons (cyclic and
    acyclic) that is purified (refined) by taking
    advantage of the boiling point differences of the
    various components

45
Sources of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • Boiling point is observed to increase with
    increasing chain C-chain length (and ring size
    for cycloalkanes).
  • About a 30o increase per additional C (CH2-
    unit) in the chain.

46
Physical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  1. Alkanes and cycloalkanes are water-insoluble
  2. Alkanes and cycloalkanes have densities that are
    less than that of water (0.6 0.8 g/mL, as
    compared to 1 g/mL for H2O)
  3. Boiling points of continuous chain alkanes and
    cycloalkanes increase with an increase in
    carbon-chain length or ring size
  • Cycloalkanes have higher boiling points than
    corresponding alkanes because they are more
  • rigid
  • Branched chain alkanes have lower boiling points
    because they are more compact and have
  • less surface areas that straight-chain forms

47
Chemical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • Alkanes and cycloalkanes have low chemical
    reactivities. The C-C bonds and C-H bonds are
    non-polar, which do not encourage reactions with
    other species, and the bond strengths are fairly
    high (strong bonds)
  • Two reactions that they are susceptible to are
    combustion and halogenation

48
Chemical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • In a combustion reaction, alkanes and
    cycloalkanes are reacted with O2 to form CO2 in
    an oxygen-rich environments (or CO or other
    C-products in less O2-rich environments).
  • Some examples of alkane combustion reactions
  • CH4 2O2 ? CO2 2H2O heat
  • 2C6H14 19O2 ? 12CO2 14H2O heat

49
Chemical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • Halogenation reactions involve halogen atoms
    (group 7 F, Cl, Br, I). These reactions involve
    the substitution of a hydrogen atom of an alkane
    with a halogen

In general, the reaction goes like this
50
Chemical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • In a substitution reaction, an atom or group of
    atoms is replaced by another atom (or group of
    atoms) in a hydrocarbon or hydrocarbon
    derivative.
  • On the surface, they are like the replacement
    reactions weve already studied

51
Chemical properties of alkanes and cycloalkanes
  • In situations where more than one type of product
    can result, a mixture of products is usually
    obtained.
  • In many cases, more than one H-atom can be
    substituted

52
Nomenclature and properties of halogenated alkanes
  • Halogenated alkanes (or haloalkanes) are
    hydrocarbons (or their derivates) that possess at
    least one halogen atoms
  • Naming rules
  • Halogens are treated just like other (alkyl)
    substituents when numbering and alphabetic naming
    are considered
  • Substituents are called fluoro-, chloro, bromo-,
    and iodo- for the purposes of assigning names

53
Nomenclature and properties of halogenated alkanes
  • In terms of chemical reactivity, halogenated
    alkanes are more reactive than alkanes and
    cycloalkane analogues, because the C-X bond (X
    halogen) makes the bond polar and thus
    susceptible to reactions that require initial
    dipole-dipole interactions.
  • Some halogenated alkanes have densities greater
    than that of water.
  • Chloroalkanes with 2 or more Cl-atoms
  • Bromoalkanes
  • Iodoalkanes
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