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Structure of hydrocarbons

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1 Structure of hydrocarbons
Hydrocarbon: a compound composed only of carbon and hydrogen Saturated hydrocarbon: a hydrocarbon containing only single bonds Alkane: a saturated hydrocarbon whose carbons are arranged in an open chain Aliphatic hydrocarbon: another name for an alkane

2 Hydrocarbons

3 Structure Shape tetrahedral about carbon
all bond angles are approximately 109.5°

4 Drawing Alkanes Line-angle formulas
an abbreviated way to draw structural formulas each vertex and line ending represents a carbon

5 Constitutional Isomerism
Constitutional isomers: compounds with the same molecular formula but a different connectivity of their atoms example: C4H10

6 Constitutional Isomerism
do these formulas represent constitutional isomers? find the longest carbon chain number each chain from the end nearest the first branch compare chain lengths as well the identity and location of branches

7 Constitutional Isomerism
World population is about 6,000,000,000

8 Nomenclature - IUPAC Suffix -ane specifies an alkane
Prefix tells the number of carbon atoms

9 Nomenclature - IUPAC Parent name: the longest carbon chain
Substituent: a group bonded to the parent chain alkyl group: a substituent derived by removal of a hydrogen from an alkane; given the symbol R-

10 Nomenclature - IUPAC 1.The name of a saturated hydrocarbon with an unbranched chain consists of a prefix and suffix 2. The parent chain is the longest chain of carbon atoms 3. Each substituent is given a name and a number 4. If there is one substituent, number the chain from the end that gives it the lower number

11 Nomenclature - IUPAC 5. If there are two or more identical substituents, number the chain from the end that gives the lower number to the substituent encountered first indicate the number of times the substituent appears by a prefix di-, tri-, tetra-, etc. use commas to separate position numbers

12 Nomenclature - IUPAC 6. If there are two or more different substituents, list them in alphabetical order number from the end of the chain that gives the substituent encountered first the lower number

13 Nomenclature - IUPAC 7. The prefixes di-, tri-, tetra-, etc. are not included in alphabetization alphabetize the names of substituents first and then insert these prefixes

14 Nomenclature - IUPAC Alkyl groups

15 Nomenclature - Common The number of carbons in the alkane determines the name all alkanes with four carbons are butanes, those with five carbons are pentanes, etc. iso- indicates the chain terminates in -CH(CH3)2; neo- that it terminates in -C(CH3)3

16 Classification of C & H Primary (1°) C: a carbon bonded to one other carbon 1° H: a hydrogen bonded to a 1° carbon Secondary (2°) C: a carbon bonded to two other carbons 2° H: a hydrogen bonded to a 2° carbon Tertiary (3°) C: a carbon bonded to three other carbons 3° H: a hydrogen bonded to a 3° carbon Quaternary (4°) C: a carbon bonded to four other carbons

17 Cycloalkanes General formula CnH2n
five- and six-membered rings are the most common Structure and nomenclature to name, prefix the name of the corresponding open-chain alkane with cyclo-, and name each substituent on the ring if only one substituent, no need to give it a number if two substituents, number from the substituent of lower alphabetical order if three or more substituents, number to give them the lowest set of numbers and then list substituents in alphabetical order

18 Cycloalkanes Line-angle drawings each line represents a C-C bond
each vertex and line ending represents a C

19 Cycloalkanes Example: name these cycloalkanes

20 IUPAC - General Nature of Carbon-Carbon Bonds in the Parent Chain
prefix-infix-suffix prefix tells the number of carbon atoms in the parent infix tells the nature of the carbon-carbon bonds suffix tells the class of compound Nature of Carbon-Carbon Bonds in the Parent Chain Suffix Class Infix -e hydrocarbon -an- all single bonds -ol alcohol -en- one or more double bonds -al aldehyde -yn- one or more triple bonds -amine amine -one ketone -oic acid carboxylic acid

21 IUPAC - General prop-en-e = propene eth-an-ol = ethanol but-an-one = butanone but-an-al = butanal pent-an-oic acid = pentanoic acid cyclohex-an-ol = cyclohexanol eth-yn-e = ethyne eth-an-amine = ethanamine

22 Cis,Trans Isomerism Stereoisomers: compounds that have
the same molecular formula the same connectivity a different orientation of their atoms in space Cis,trans isomers stereoisomers that are the result of the presence of either a ring (this chapter) or a carbon-carbon double bond (Chapter 5)

23 Isomers relationships among isomers

24 Cis,Trans Isomers 1,2-Dimethylcyclopentane

25 Cis,Trans Isomerism 1,4-Dimethylcyclohexane

26 Cis,Trans Isomerism trans-1,4-Dimethylcyclohexane
the diequatorial-methyl chair conformation is more stable by approximately 2 x (7.28) = kJ/mol

27 Cis,Trans Isomerism cis-1,4-Dimethylcyclohexane

28 Physical Properties Constitutional isomers have different physical properties

29 Heats of Combustion For constitutional isomers [kJ (kcal)/mol]
( ) ( ) (1304.6) (1303.0) 8 C O 2 + 9 H 2 O

30 Heat of Combustion strain in cycloalkane rings as determined by heats of combustion

31 Sources of Alkanes Natural gas Petroleum Coal 90-95% methane
gases (bp below 20°C) naphthas, including gasoline (bp °C) kerosene (bp °C) fuel oil (bp °C) lubricating oils (bp above 350°C) asphalt (residue after distillation) Coal

32 Gasoline Octane rating: the percent 2,2,4-trimethylpentane (isooctane) in a mixture of isooctane and heptane that has equivalent antiknock properties

33 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons
Unsaturated hydrocarbon: contains one or more carbon-carbon double or triple bonds Alkene: contains a carbon-carbon double bond and has the general formula CnH2n

34 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons
Alkyne: contains a carbon-carbon triple bond and has the general formula CnH2n-2

35 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons
Arenes: benzene and its derivatives

36 Benzene & Phenyl Group the phenyl group is not reactive under any of the conditions we describe for alkynes

37 Structure of Alkenes The two carbon atoms of a double bond and the four atoms attached to them lie in a plane, with bond angles of approximately 120° According to the orbital overlap model, a double bond consists of one sigma bond formed by overlap of sp2 hybrid orbitals one pi bond formed by overlap of parallel 2p orbitals

38 Structure of Alkenes Length of C-C bonds: single > double > triple Strength of C-C bonds:triple > double > single

39 Cis-Trans Isomerism Because of restricted rotation about a C-C double bond, groups on adjacent carbons are either cis or trans to each other

40 Nomenclature - Alkenes
Use the infix -en- to show the presence of a carbon-carbon double bond Number the parent chain to give the 1st carbon of the double bond the lower number Follow IUPAC rules for numbering and naming substituents For a cycloalkene, the double bond must be numbered 1,2

41 Nomenclature - Alkenes

42 Nomenclature - Alkenes

43 Nomenclature - Alkenes
Some alkenes, particularly low-molecular-weight ones, are known almost exclusively by their common names

44 Nomenclature - Alkynes
IUPAC: use the infix -yn- to show the presence of a carbon-carbon triple bond

45 Nomenclature - Alkynes
Common names: prefix the substituents on the triple bond to the name “acetylene”

46 Configuration - cis, trans
The cis-trans system: configuration is determined by the orientation of atoms of the main chain

47 Configuration - E,Z The E,Z system uses the priority rules of the R,S system to assign to the groups on each carbon of a carbon-carbon double bond 1. Each atom bonded to the C-C double bond is assigned a priority 2. If groups of higher priority are on the same side, configuration is Z (German, zusammen) 3. If groups of higher priority are on opposite sides, configuration is E (German, entgegen)

48 Configuration - E,Z Example: name each alkene and specify its configuration by the E,Z system

49 Physical Properties Alkenes are nonpolar compounds
The only attractive forces between their molecules are dispersion forces The physical properties of alkenes are similar to those of alkanes

50 Terpenes Terpene: a compound whose carbon skeleton can be divided into two or more units identical with the carbon skeleton of isoprene

51 Terpenes Myrcene, C10H16, a component of bayberry wax and oils of bay and verbena Menthol, from peppermint Camphor, from the camphor tree

52 Vitamin A (Retinol)

53 Benzene - Resonance Model
The concepts of hybridization of atomic orbitals and the theory of resonance, developed in the 1930s, provided the first adequate description of benzene’s structure and reactivity the carbon skeleton is a regular hexagon all C-C-C and H-C-C bond angles 120°

54 Benzene - The Resonance Model
The pi system of benzene (a) the carbon framework with the six 2p orbitals (b) overlap of the parallel 2p orbitals forms one torus above the plane of the ring and another below it this orbital represents the lowest-lying pi-bonding molecular orbital

55 Benzene - Resonance We often represent benzene as a hybrid of two equivalent Kekulé structures each makes an equal contribution to the hybrid and thus the C-C bonds are neither double nor single, but something in between

56 Benzene - Resonance Resonance energy: the difference in energy between a resonance hybrid and the most stable of its hypothetical contributing structures in which electrons are localized on particular atoms and in particular bonds one way to estimate the resonance energy of benzene is to compare the heats of hydrogenation of benzene and cyclohexene

57 Benzene

58 Concept of Aromaticity
The underlying criteria for aromaticity were recognized in the early 1930s by Erich Hückel, based on molecular orbital (MO) calculations To be aromatic, a compound must be cyclic have one p orbital on each atom of the ring be planar or nearly planar so that there is continuous or nearly continuous overlap of all p orbitals of the ring have a closed loop of (4n + 2) pi electrons in the cyclic arrangement of p orbitals

59 Heterocyclic Aromatics
Heterocyclic compound: a compound that contains more than one kind of atom in a ring in organic chemistry, the term refers to a ring with one or more atoms are other than carbon Pyridine and pyrimidine are heterocyclic analogs of benzene; each is aromatic.

60 Nomenclature of aromatic compounds
Monosubstituted alkylbenzenes are named as derivatives of benzene many common names are retained T oluene E thylbenzene C umene S tyrene O H N H 2 C H O C O H O C H 3 Phenol Aniline Benzaldehyde Benzoic acid Anisole

61 Nomenclature Benzyl and phenyl groups C H C H - Benzene P
3 C H 2 - Benzene P henyl group, Ph- Toluene B enzyl group, Bn- O O H 3 C O P h 1-Phenyl-1pentanone 4-(3-Methoxyphenyl)- 2-butanone (Z)-2-Phenyl- 2-butene

62 Disubstituted Benzenes
Locate two groups by numbers or by the locators ortho (1,2-), meta (1,3-), and para (1,4-) where one group imparts a special name, name the compound as a derivative of that molecule

63 Polysubstituted Derivatives
if one group imparts a special name, name the molecule as a derivative of that compound if no group imparts a special name, list them in alphabetical order, giving them the lowest set of numbers C H 3 O H N O 2 1 1 N O 2 B r B r 4 2 6 2 2 B r 4 4 1 C l B r C H 2 3 4-Chloro-2-nitro- toluene 2,4,6-Tribromo- phenol 2-Bromo-1-ethyl-4- nitrobenzene

64 Phenols The functional group of a phenol is an -OH group bonded to a benzene ring O H O H O H O H O H C H 3 O H Phenol 3-Methylphenol ( m- Cresol) 1,2-Benzenediol (Catechol) 1,4-Benzenediol (Hydroquinone)

65 Phenols hexylresorcinol is a mild antiseptic and disinfectant
eugenol is used as a dental antiseptic and analgesic urushiol is the main component of the oil of poison ivy

66 Quinones Important chemical property of quinones is that they are readily reduced to hydroquinones


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