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Alkanes and Cycloalkanes. Conformational and Geometric Isomerism. Hydrocarbons. Petroleum Saturated Single-bonded C’s Alkanes or cycloalkanes Unsaturated At least 1 double- or triple-bonded pair of C’s Alkenes—double Alkynes—triple Can be cyclic Aromatic Structures like benzene.
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Alkanes and Cycloalkanes Conformational and Geometric Isomerism
Hydrocarbons • Petroleum • Saturated • Single-bonded C’s • Alkanes or cycloalkanes • Unsaturated • At least 1 double- or triple-bonded pair of C’s • Alkenes—double • Alkynes—triple • Can be cyclic • Aromatic • Structures like benzene
Alkane Structure • Simplest • Bond angle • CnH2n + 2 • Normal v. branched • n-alkanes • Methylene group • —CH2 • Homologous series • Consecutive building with predictable chemical and physical properties
Nomenclature of Organic Compounds • Common • Sources, structure, or uses • Limonene • Cubane • IUPAC • Systematic method • Unique name • Write structures from names • 1-methyl-4-(1-methylethenyl)-cyclohexene • pentacyclo[4.2.0.02,5.03,8.04,7]octane
IUPAC Rules for Alkanes 1. The –aneending will be used for all saturated hydrocarbons. 2. Alkanes without branches are named according to the number of C’s 3. Branched alkanes use a root or parent name for the longest continuous chain of C’s
IUPAC Rules for Alkanes 4. Anything not on the root chain is known as a substituent. Saturated substituents are known as alkyl groups, and names come from # of C’s. methyl ethyl propyl
IUPAC Rules for Alkanes n-propyl isopropyl n-butyl isobutyl sec-butyl
IUPAC Rules for Alkanes 5. The root chain is numbered such that the first substituent along the chain receives the lowest possible number. • Any other substituents are also located by name and location. Every substituent must be named and numbered. • If two or more of the same substituent are present, prefixes such as di, tri, tetra, penta, etc. are used • If two or more different types of substituents are used, they are listed alphabetically, ignoring prefixes such as di, tri, n, iso, sec, tert unless necessary to alphabetize
IUPAC Rules for Alkanes 5. Separate numbers from words with a hyphen; separate numbers from numbers with a comma. There are no spaces within an IUPAC name. Let’s use some C skeletons as our first examples:
Halogen Substituents • The letter R represents alkyl group. R-H means any alkane. • The halogens that may take the place of the H: F, Cl, Br, and I • The name of halogen loses ine suffix and becomes o: fluoromethane, chloromethane, bromomethane, iodomethane • Common names treat R as substituent and halogen as root chain
Alkane Sources • Petroleum • Mixture of alkanes and cycloalkanes • Gasoline v. diesel • LPG—1° propane • butane • Natural Gas • ~80% methane and 5-10% ethane • Liquefied for transportation (-160°C, 1 m3l = 600 m3g)
Alkane Properties and Intermolecular Forces • Insoluble in water • H-bonding v. LDF • Lower bp for MW than other organics • bp rises as chain length increases • bp falls as chain becomes more branched
Alkane Conformations • Stereoisomers • Atoms connected in same order but arranged differently in space • Sigma bonds • Single bonds allow rotation • Staggered • Eclipsed • Rotamers or Conformers • Dash-wedge • Sawhorse • Newman projections
Cylcoalkane Nomenclature Ring of C’s cyclo is prefix on alkane name With 1 substituent, no number needed More than 1 substituent, numbers needed Alphabetic priority gets lowest number cylcopropanecyclobutanecyclopentane cyclohexane cycloheptanecyclooctane bp = -32.7°C 12°C 49.3°C 80.7°C 118.5°C 149°C
Cycloalkane Nomenclature CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH2CH3 methylcyclooctane NOT… 1,2-dimethylcyclooctane NOT… 1-ethyl-2-methylcyclooctane NOT…
Cylcoalkane Conformations • Cyclopropane • Planar with 60° C-C-C (only cycloalkane that is planar) • Cyclobutane • 88° C-C-C (predicted 90°) • Cyclopentane • 105° C-C-C (predicted 108°) • Cyclohexane • 109.5° C-C-C • Chair conformation
Cyclohexane Chair Conformations Axial…3 up, 3 down Equatorial, 6 in mean plane of C’s Flipping occurs easily at RT; slows as T decreases Important in biomolecules like glucose
Cyclohexane Boat Conformation Why is this conformation less stable than the chair conformation?
Cis-Trans Isomerism in Cycloalkanes Type of stereoisomers or geometric stereoisomers in which substituents are on the same side (cis) or the opposite side (trans) of a ring Different physical and chemical properties Not readily converted like conformers are
Reactions of Alkanes • Relatively inert • Oxidation (Combustion) • Excess O2 produces CO2, most oxidized form of C (ox # is +4) • Insufficient O2 means lower ox # of C • CO • C • CH2O • CH3CO2H • Halogenation (substitution rxn) • Excess halogen results in more substitution…even mixtures • Cycloalkanes make pure organic products
Oxidation of Alkanes CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2H2O 2CH4+ 3O2 2CO + 4H2O CH4 + O2 C + 2H2O CH4 + O2 CH2O + H2O 2C2H6+ 3O2 2CH3CO2H + 2H2O
Halogenation of Alkanes CH4 + Cl2 CH3Cl + HCl Process is known as chlorination (others are fluorination, bromination, and iodination) Excess of halogen, more H’s are substituted CCl4 can be produced with enough chlorine. + F2 + HF energy light F
Halogenation: Free Radical Chain Mechanism • Rxn Mechanism • Most rxns have multiple steps • Chain-initiating step • Breaking of halogen molecule • Chain-propagating step • Radical is formed (odd # of unshared e-) • Each step: radical is consumed, but another radical is produced • Chain-terminating step • No new radicals are formed and all radicals are combined with some other radical
Halogenation: Free Radical Chain Mechanism R-H + Cl-Cl R-Cl + H-Cl Chain-initiating step Chain-propagating steps Possible chain-terminating steps light
Reaction Summary Combustion Halogenation
Reaction Mechanism Summary Halogenation