Title: Classes of Hydrocarbons
1Classes of Hydrocarbons
2Hydrocarbons
Aromatic
Aliphatic
3Hydrocarbons
Aromatic
Aliphatic
Alkanes
Alkenes
Alkynes
4Hydrocarbons
- Alkanes are hydrocarbons in which all of the
bonds are single bonds.
Aliphatic
Alkanes
5Hydrocarbons
- Alkenes are hydrocarbons that contain a
carbon-carbon double bond.
Aliphatic
Alkenes
6Hydrocarbons
- Alkynes are hydrocarbons that contain a
carbon-carbon triple bond.
Aliphatic
Alkynes
7Hydrocarbons
- The most common aromatic hydrocarbons are those
that contain a benzene ring.
Aromatic
8Reactive Sites in Hydrocarbons The Functional
Group Concept
9Functional Group
- a structural unit in a molecule responsible for
itscharacteristic chemical behavior and its - spectroscopic characteristics
10Alkanes
- functional group is a hydrogen atom
- the reaction that takes place is
- termed a substitution
- one of the hydrogens is substitutedby some other
atom or group, X
11Alkanes
- functional group is a hydrogen
- the reaction that takes place is substitution
- one of the hydrogens is substituted by some
other atom or group
Cl2
HCl
12Functional Groups in Hydrocarbons
- alkanes RH
- alkenes RH, double bond
- alkynes RH, triple bond
- aromatics ArH, double bond
13Some Key Functional Groups
14Families of organic compounds and their
functional groups
- Alcohols ROH
- Alkyl halides RX (X F, Cl, Br, I)
- Amines primary amine RNH2
- secondary amine R2NH
- tertiary amine R3N
- Ethers ROR
15Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
R
Carbonyl group
Acyl group
16Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
H
R
Carbonyl group
Aldehyde
17Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
R'
R
Carbonyl group
Ketone
18Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
OH
R
Carbonyl group
Carboxylic acid
19Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
OR'
R
Ester
Carbonyl group
20Many classes of organic compounds contain a
carbonyl group
NH2
R
Amide
Carbonyl group
21General formula for an alkane
CnH2n2
Introduction to Alkanes Methane, CH4 Ethane,
C2H6 Propane, C3H8
22The simplest alkanes
- Methane (CH4) CH4
- Ethane (C2H6) CH3CH3
- Propane (C3H8) CH3CH2CH3
bp -160C
bp -89C
bp -42C
No isomers possible for C1, C2, C3 hydrocarbons
23Isomeric Alkanes The Butanes
C4H10
General formula for any butane
24C4H10
- n-Butane Isobutane
- CH3CH2CH2CH3 (CH3)3CH
-
bp -0.4C
bp -10.2C
25Higher n-Alkanes Pentane (C5H12) and Beyond
CnH2n2 n gt 4
26CnH2n2 n gt 4
CH3CH2CH2CH2CH3
n-Pentane
CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3
n-Hexane
CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3
n-Heptane
27The C5H12 Isomers
28C5H12
CH3CH2CH2CH2CH3
(CH3)2CHCH2CH3
Isopentane
n-Pentane
(CH3)4C
Neopentane
29How many isomers?
- 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.
30Table 2.3 Number of Constitutionally Isomeric
Alkanes
- CH4 1
- C2H6 1
- C3H8 1
- C4H10 2
- C5H12 3
- C6H14 5
- C7H16 9
31Table 2.3 Number of Constitutionally Isomeric
Alkanes
- CH4 1 C8H18 18
- C2H6 1 C9H20 35
- C3H8 1 C10H22 75
- C4H10 2 C15H32 4,347
- C5H12 3 C20H42 366,319
- C6H14 5 C40H82 62,491,178,805,831
- C7H16 9
32C6H6 Isomers
- How many isomers with the composition
- C6H6 can you draw?
33C6H6 Isomers How many isomers with the
compositionC6H6 can you draw?
34Structure and Bonding in Alkenes
35Structure of Ethylene
- bond angles H-C-H 117
- H-C-C 121
- bond distances CH 110 pm
- CC 134 pm
planar
36Bonding in Ethylene
s
s
s
s
s
- Framework of s bonds
- Each carbon is sp2 hybridized
37Bonding in Ethylene
- Each carbon has a half-filled p orbital
38Bonding in Ethylene
- Side-by-side overlap of half-filled p orbitals
gives a p bond
39Isomerism in Alkenes
40Isomers
Isomers are different compounds thathave the
same molecular formula (composition).
41Isomers
Stereoisomers
Constitutional isomers
42Isomers
Stereoisomers
Constitutional isomers
same connectivity different arrangementof atoms
in space
different connectivity
43Isomers
Stereoisomers
Constitutional isomers
consider the isomeric alkenes of molecular
formula C4H8
441-Butene
2-Methylpropene
trans-2-Butene
cis-2-Butene
451-Butene
2-Methylpropene
Constitutional isomers
cis-2-Butene
461-Butene
2-Methylpropene
Constitutional isomers
trans-2-Butene
47Stereoisomers
trans-2-Butene
cis-2-Butene
48Molecular Chirality Enantiomers
49Chirality
- 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.
50Bromochlorofluoromethane is chiral
Cl
- It cannot be superposed point for point on its
mirror image.
Br
H
F
51Bromochlorofluoromethane is chiral
Cl
Cl
Br
Br
H
H
F
F
- To show nonsuperposability, rotate this model
180 around a vertical axis.
52Bromochlorofluoromethane is chiral
Cl
Br
Cl
Br
H
H
F
F
53Another look
54Enantiomers
nonsuperposable mirror images are called
enantiomers
and
- are enantiomers with respect to each other
55Isomers
constitutional isomers
stereoisomers
56Isomers
constitutional isomers
stereoisomers
geometric isomers (cis/trans)
enantiomers (optical)
57Chlorodifluoromethaneis achiral
58Chlorodifluoromethaneis achiral
- The two structures are mirror images, but are
not enantiomers, because they can be superposed
on each other.
59Symmetry in Achiral Structures
60Symmetry tests for achiral structures
- Any molecule with a plane of symmetrymust be
achiral.
61Plane of symmetry
- A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two
mirror image halves. Chlorodifluoromethane has
a plane of symmetry.
62Plane of symmetry
- A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two
mirror image halves. Chlorodifluoromethane has
a plane of symmetry.
63Plane of symmetry
- A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two
mirror image halves.1-Bromo-1-chloro-2-fluoroeth
ene has a planeof symmetry.
64Plane of symmetry
- A plane of symmetry bisects a molecule into two
mirror image halves.1-Bromo-1-chloro-2-fluoroeth
ene has a planeof symmetry.
65 Physical Properties ofAlkanes and Cycloalkanes
66Boiling Points
- 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 areafewer points of
contact with other molecules
67(No Transcript)
68Boiling Points
- increase with increasing number of carbons
- more atoms, more electrons, more opportunities
for induced dipole-induced dipole forces
Heptanebp 98C
Octanebp 125C
Nonanebp 150C
69Boiling Points
- decrease with chain branching
- branched molecules are more compact
with smaller surface areafewer points of
contact with other molecules
Octane bp 125C
2-Methylheptane bp 118C
2,2,3,3-Tetramethylbutane bp 107C
70Boiling 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
71Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- two nonpolar molecules
- center of positive charge and center of negative
charge coincide in each
72Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- movement of electrons creates an instantaneous
dipole in one molecule (left)
73Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- temporary dipole in one molecule (left) induces
a complementary dipole in other molecule (right)
74Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- temporary dipole in one molecule (left) induces
a complementary dipole in other molecule (right)
75Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- the result is a small attractive force between
the two molecules
76Induced dipole-Induced dipole attractive forces
- the result is a small attractive force between
the two molecules
77Straight chain hydrocarbon Branched hydrocarbon
Fewer intermolecular contacts
Lots of intermolecular contacts