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Chapter 6. Alkenes: Structure and Reactivity. Introduction. An alkene is a hydrocarbon that contains a carbon-carbon double bond It is also called an olefin but alkene is better It is abundant in nature It is an important industrial product.
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Chapter 6 Alkenes: Structure and Reactivity
Introduction • An alkene is a hydrocarbon that contains a carbon-carbon double bond • It is also called an olefin but alkene is better • It is abundant in nature • It is an important industrial product
It includes many naturally occurring materials • flavors, fragrances, vitamins
I. Alkenes: An Overview • Industrial Preparation and Use of Alkenes • Degree of Unsaturation • Naming Alkenes
Ethylene and propylene are the simplest alkenes the most important organic chemicals produced industrially A.Industrial Preparation and Use of Alkenes
Industrial Synthesis of Ethylene, Propylene and Butene • Ethylene, propylene, and butene are synthesized industrially by thermal cracking of light (C2-C8) alkanes:
Industrial Synthesis of ethylene, propylene and butene • The high-temperature conditions cause spontaneous homolytic breaking of C-C and C-H bonds, forming smaller fragments: • Thermal cracking is an example of a reaction whose energetics is governed by TDSo rather than DHo DGo = DHo – TDSo TDSo > DHo
B.Degree of Unsaturation • Alkenes - are unsaturated hydrocarbons. • They have fewer hydrogens than alkanes with same number of carbons
Acyclic Alkanes - have the general formula CnH2n+2 where n is an integer • Acyclic Alkenes - have the general formula CnH2n where n is an integer
Degree of Unsaturationis the number of p bonds and/or rings in the molecule. • Each ring or multiple bond replaces 2 H's in the alkane formula CnH2n+2 • It relates molecular formula to possible structures
Degree of Unsaturationis the number of p bonds and/or rings in the molecule. (2n+2)-x Degree of Unsaturation = 2 where n is the number of carbons x is the number of hydrogens
Example:A hydrocarbon with a molecular weight (82 g/mol) C6H10 • Saturated is C6H14 • Therefore 4 H's are not present • This has two degrees of unsaturation • Two double bonds? • or triple bond? • or two rings? • or ring and double bond?
Degree of Unsaturation With Other Elements • Organohalogens (C, H, X where X: F, Cl, Br, I) • Halogen replaces hydrogen • Add the number of halogens to the number of hydrogens • C4H6Br2 and C4H8 have one degree of unsaturation
Organooxygens (C, H, O) • Oxygen forms two bonds. It does not affect the total count of H's • Ignorethe number of oxygens • C5H8O and C5H8 have two degrees of unsaturation
Organonitrogens (C, H, N) • Nitrogen has three bonds. So if it connects where H was, it adds a connection point • Subtract the number of nitrogens from the number of hydrogens
Summary: Degree of Unsaturation • Degree of Unsaturation can be calculated: • Count pairs of H's below CnH 2n+2 • Add number of halogens to number of H's (X equivalent to H) • Ignore or don't count oxygens (O links H) • Subtract number of nitrogens from H's (N has two connections)
Degree of Unsaturation and Variation • Compounds with the same degree of unsaturation can have many things in common and still be very different
Practice Problem: Calculate the degree of unsaturation in the following hydrocarbons: • C8H14 • C5H6 • C12H20 • C20H32 • C40H56 (b-carotene)
Practice Problem: Calculate the degree of unsaturation in the following formulas, and then draw as many structures as you can for each: • C4H8 • C4H6 • C3H4
Practice Problem: Calculate the degree of unsaturation in the following formulas: • C6H5N • C6H5NO2 • C8H9Cl3 • C9H16Br2 • C10H12N2O3 • C20H32ClN
C.Naming Alkenes • Like alkanes, alkenes are named according to the system devised by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).
Steps to naming alkenes1 • Name the parent hydrocarbon • Find the longest continuous carbon chain containing the double bond • Name using the suffix -ene
Steps to naming alkenes2 • Number the carbon atoms in the main chain • The double-bond carbons receive the lowest possible numbers • The correct sequence is when the substituents have the lowest possible number
Steps to naming alkenes3 • Write the full name • Name, number and list the substituents alphabetically • Indicate the position of the double-bond
Steps to naming alkenes3 • Write the full name • If more than one double bond is present: • indicate the position of each and • Use the suffixes -diene, -triene, …
Naming Cycloalkenes • Like alkenes, cycloalkenes are also named by the rules devised by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).
Steps to naming cycloalkenes1 • Name the parent hydrocarbon • Number the cycloalkene so that the double bond is between C1 and C2 • Name using the prefix cyclo- and the suffix -ene
Steps to naming cycloalkenes2 • Number the substituents and write the name • The correct sequence is when the substituents have the lowest possible number
Common Names of Alkenes • Many alkenes are known by their common names. • These common names are recognized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).
Practice Problem: Give IUPAC names for the following compounds:
Practice Problem: Draw structures corresponding to the following IUPAC names: • 2-Methyl-1,5-hexadiene • 3-Ethyl-2,2-dimethyl-3-heptene • 2,3,3-Trimethyl-1,4,6-octatriene • 3,4-Diisopropyl-2,5-dimethyl-3-hexene • 4-tert-Butyl-2-methylheptane
II. Alkenes: Structure • Electronic Structure • Cis-Trans Isomerism • Sequence Rules: The E, Z Designation • Stability of Alkenes
A.Electronic Structure of Alkenes • Carbon atoms in a double bond are sp2-hybridized • Three equivalent orbitals are in a plane at 120º angle • Fourth orbital is atomic p orbital (perpendicular to the plane)
Two sp2-hybridized Carbon atoms form: • bond • Head-on overlap of two sp2 orbitals forms a bond • bond • Side-to-side overlap of two p orbitals forms a bond
Molecular Orbitals (MO) • Additive interaction of p orbitals (combining p orbital lobes with the same algebraic sign) creates a bonding orbital • Subtractive interaction (combining lobes with opposite signs) creates a anti-bonding orbital
Only bonding MO is occupied. • Occupied orbital prevents rotation. • Rotation prevented by bond - high barrier, about 268 kJ/mole in ethylene
Rotation of Bond is Prohibitive • The bond does not have circular cross-section. • The bond must break for rotation to take place around a carbon-carbon double bond (unlike a carbon-carbon single bond). • It creates possible alternative structures
The presence of a carbon-carbon double can create two possible structures cis isomer - two similar groups on same side of the double bond trans isomer- similar groups on opposite sides B.Cis-Trans Isomerism
Cis-Trans Isomerism requires that end groups must differ in pairs Each carbon must havetwo different groups for these isomers to occur
Cis-Trans Isomerism requires that end groups must differ in pairs • 180°rotation superposes the upper pair • Bottom pair cannot be superposed without breaking C=C X
Practice Problem: Which of the following compounds can exist as pairs of cis-trans isomers? Draw each cis- trans pair, and indicate the geometry of each isomer. • CH3CH=CH2 • (CH3)2C=CHCH3 • CH3CH2CH=CHCH3 • (CH3)2C=C(CH3)CH2CH3 • ClCH=CHCl • BrCH=CHCl
Practice Problem: Name the following alkenes, including the cis or trans designation:
Neither compound is clearly “cis” or “trans” Substituents on C1 are different than those on C2 We need to define “similarity” in a precise way to distinguish the two stereoisomers Cis-trans nomenclature only works for disubstituted double bonds C.Sequence Rules: The E, Z Designation
Develop a System for Comparison of Priority of Substituents • Assume a valuation system • If Br has a higher “value” than Cl • If CH3 is higher than H • Then, in A, the higher value groups are on opposite sides • In B, they are on the same side • Requires a universally accepted “valuation”
E,Z Stereochemical Nomenclature • Priority rules of Cahn, Ingold, and Prelog are used. • Compare where higher priority group is with respect to C=C bond and designate a prefix • E - entgegen:opposite sides • Z - zusammen: together on the same side
E - entgegen Z - zusammen
Cahn-Ingold-Prelog Rules • Ranking Priorities • Look at the atoms directly attached to each double-bond carbon • Rank them according to atomic number. Higher atomic number gets higher priority.