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Chapter 10



An Introduction to Organic Chemistry



                                       1
10.1 The chemistry of carbon

Why are there so many carbon-based compounds?
  Carbon atoms form stable, covalent bonds with each other.
  Carbon atoms form stable bonds with other elements, such as
  oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and halogens.
  Carbon atoms form multiple bonds with:
     other carbon atoms (double & triple);
     oxygen (double);
     nitrogen (double & triple).
  Carbon atoms can be arranged in linear chains, branched
  chains, and cyclic structures.



                                                                2
10.1 Organic/inorganic compound differences

• Bond type
    – Organics have covalent bonds
     •   Electron sharing
    – Inorganics usually have ionic bonds
     •   Electron transfer
• Structure
    – Organics
     •   Molecules
     •   Nonelectrolytes
    – Inorganics
     •   Three-dimensional crystal structures
     •   Often water-soluble, dissociating into ions -electrolytes

                                                                     3
10.1 Organic/inorganic compound differences


• Melting point & boiling point
    – Organics have covalent bonds
      •   Intermolecular forces broken fairly easily
    – Inorganics usually have ionic bonds
      •   Ionic bonds require more energy to break
• Water solubility
    – Organics
      •   Nonpolar, water insoluble
    – Inorganics
      •   Water-soluble, readily dissociate


                                                        4
10.1 Functional groups


Groups of atoms that cause organic compounds to
exhibit particular properties are called functional groups.
  e.g., alcohols always have an –OH group.


We’ll be studying organic chemistry by functional group.




                                                              5
10.1 Functional groups


Alkenes contain a
double bond between
adjacent carbon
atoms.

Alkynes contain a
triple bond.


                              6
10.1 Functional groups


An alcohol contains the
hydroxyl (-OH) functional
group.

In an ether, an oxygen atom
is bonded to two carbon
atoms.




                               7
10.1 Functional groups


An aldehyde contains a
carbonyl group (C=O), which is
a carbon atom with a double
bond to an oxygen atom.

In a ketone, the carbon of the
carbonyl group is attached to
two other carbon atoms.


                                 8
10.1 Functional groups


Carboxylic acids contain the
carboxyl group, which is a
carbonyl group attached to
a hydroxyl group.

An ester contains the
carboxyl group between
carbon atoms.


                               9
10.1 Functional groups


In amines, the
functional group is a
nitrogen atom.

In amides, the hydroxyl
group of a carboxylic
acid is replaced by a
nitrogen group.


                                10
10.2 Alkanes

Hydrocarbons are compounds composed only of carbon
and hydrogen.
  Saturated hydrocarbons have only single bonds.
  Unsaturated hydrocarbons have one or more double and/or
  triple bonds.


Saturated hydrocarbons are called
  alkanes if they are acyclic.
  cycloalkanes if they are cyclic.




                                                            11
10.2 Sources of alkanes

Petroleum, a naturally occurring mixture of
hydrocarbons, is the main source of alkanes.
  Liquid petroleum is called crude oil.
     hydrocarbons with 5 or more carbons


  Gaseous petroleum is called natural gas.
     mostly methane, with ethane, propane, and butane




                                                        12
10.2 Sources of alkanes




                          13
10.2 Physical properties of alkanes

Alkanes are insoluble in water.
  Water molecules are polar and can take part in hydrogen
  bonding.
  Alkanes are nonpolar.
  “Like dissolves like.”




                                                            14
10.2 Physical properties of alkanes

Alkanes have lower boiling points for a given molecular
weight than most other organic compounds.
  Alkanes are nonpolar.
  Molecules are only weakly held together by van der Waals
  attractions.




  Because the attractions are weak, less energy is needed to
  separate molecules from each other into the gas phase.
  Therefore, boiling points are lower.
                                                               15
10.2 Physical properties of alkanes

The boiling points of alkanes rise as the chain length
increases and fall as the chains become branched and
more nearly spherical.




                                                         16
10.2 Physical properties of alkanes




                                      17
10.2 Physical properties of alkanes

This is a good place to answer your first Journal question
for this module.
[Use tag “water”]

Table salt (NaCl) dissolves in water, but iodine (I2) does
not to any appreciable extent. Explain why this is, in
terms of the molecular properties of salt, water, and
iodine.




                                                             18
10.2 Writing structural formulas

Some definitions:
  Atoms bonded in a “straight” line are in a continuous chain.




  A branched chain has some carbons branching off the longest
  continuous chain.




                                                                 19
10.2 Writing structural formulas

Some hints:
  First, attach the carbon atoms to each other in the correct
  configuration.
  Add hydrogen atoms until each carbon atom has four bonds.


Structural formula of C3H8

                                         pencast




                                                                20
10.2 Abbreviated structural formulas

Writing out every atom and bond individually is
inconvenient.
Abbreviated structural formulas list each carbon with its
hydrogens, adjacent to other carbons it is bonded to.

  ethanol and dimethyl ether          pencast




  n-pentane, 2,2-dimethylpropane

                                        pencast




                                                            21
10.2 Abbreviated structural formulas

Line structures
  use no element symbols.
  show only carbon-carbon bonds.



Line structures for
  n-pentane
  2-methyl-butane
  2,2-dimethylpropane
                                   pencast




                                              22
10.2 Structures of alkanes

All alkanes fit the same general molecular formula.
                        CnH2n+2
               where n = number of carbons
Normal alkanes (n-alkanes) have carbon chains that are
unbranched.
A group of alkanes that each has one more –CH2– group
is called a homologous series.

  Properties of the molecules are similar.
  Properties change gradually as carbon atoms are added.

                                                           23
10.2 Structures of alkanes




                             24
10.2 Structures of alkanes

Which of the following are alkanes?

  C7H18

  C7H16

  C8H16

  C27H56



                                      25
10.2 Alkyl groups

An alkyl group is an alkane with one hydrogen atom
removed
It is named by replacing the -ane of the alkane name with
–yl
Methane becomes a methyl group.
                   CH4 – H = -CH3
Ethane becomes an ethyl group.
               CH3CH3 – H = -CH2CH3


                                                        26
10.2 Alkyl groups




                    27
10.2 Alkyl groups


Alkyl groups are classified according to the number of
carbons attached to the carbon atom that joins the alkyl
group to a molecule.
  A primary carbon (1o) is directly bonded to one other carbon.
  A secondary carbon (2o) is directly bonded to two other
  carbons.
  A tertiary carbon (3o) is directly bonded to three other carbons.
  A quaternary carbon (4o) is directly bonded to four other
  carbons.


                                                                  28
10.2 Alkyl groups




                    29
10.2 Nomenclature

Organic compounds were initially named after their
source, use, and properties.
There are now over 15 million organic compounds
known!
Clearly, it is necessary to have a systematic method for
naming.
  Every compound must have a unique name.
  Structure must be determinable from the name.
  The name must be determinable from the structure.
The system we use is called IUPAC.
  It was devised by the International Union of Pure and Applied
  Chemistry.
                                                                  30
10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes

The –ane ending is used for all alkanes.
Alkanes without branching are named by the number of
carbon atoms.
For branched alkanes, the root name is the one for the
longest continuous chain of carbon atoms.
Groups attached to the main chain are called
substituents.
  Saturated groups composed of carbon and hydrogen are called
  alkyl groups.
  Alkyl groups are named after the corresponding alkane, with –yl
  replacing –ane.
                                                                31
10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes

The main chain is numbered so the first substituent has
the lowest possible number.
  All substituent names are preceded by the number of the
  carbon they are attached to.
  If there are two or more identical substituents, there are
     two or more numbers preceding the name, and
     a prefix (di-, tri-, tetra-, . . .) on the substituent name.
If two or more different substituents are present, they
are listed alphabetically (ignoring any number prefix).
The only punctuation used is
  commas to separate numbers from each other.
  hyphens to separate letters from numbers.

                                                                    32
10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes

Give the IUPAC names for the following compounds:


                                         pencast




                               pencast




                                                    33
10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents

Alkyl groups are named by changing the –ane ending of
alkanes to –yl.
  methyl                        CH3-
  ethyl                         CH3CH2-
  n-propyl                      CH3CH2CH2-
  isopropyl (1-methylethyl)     CH3CHCH3
  butyl                         CH3CH2CH2CH2-
  sec-butyl (1-methylpropyl)    CH3CH2CH2CH2
   isobutyl (2-methylpropyl)     (CH3)2CHCH2-
  tert-butyl (1,1-dimethylethyl) (CH3)3C-

                                                        34
10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents

Halogen substituents are named by changing the –ine
ending of the element to –o.
  fluoro-                      F-
  chloro-                      Cl-
  bromo-                       Br-
  iodo-                        I-

R is a general symbol for an alkyl group.
  R-H is any alkane.
  R-Cl or R-F or R-Br or R-I stand for alkyl halides.


                                                        35
10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents

Give a IUPAC name for CH2ClF.

Write a formula for each compound.
  1,1,1,-trichlorodecane
                                        pencast
  3,3,5-trimethylpentane


Name the following compounds.
  CH3CH2CH(CH2CH3)CH2CH2CH3                 pencast

  CH3C(CH3)2CH(CH2CH3)CH2CH2CH3

                                        pencast


                                                      36
10.2 Use of the IUPAC rules

                     2-methylpentane
                     (not 4-methylpentane)


                     3-methylhexane
                     (not 2-ethylpentane or
                      4-methylhexane)


                     2,2-dimethylbutane
                     (not 2,2-methylbutane or
                      2-dimethylbutane)


                     3-bromo-1-chlorobutane
                     (not 1-chloro-3-bromobutane or
                      2-bromo-4-chlorobutane)
                                                      37
10.2 Isomerism

If more than one arrangement is possible for a given
molecular formula, the different arrangements are called
isomers.
Structural isomers have the same molecular formula but
different structural formulas.
Consider the molecular formula C3H7Cl.

                      isomer 1
                      isomer 2



                                                           38
10.2 Isomerism

There are 5 structural isomers of C6H14.

          pencast




            Draw the 5 isomers and name them.




                                                39
10.2 Isomerism

Although all 5 isomers have the same molecular
formula, their physical properties vary.




                                                 40
10.2 Isomerism

How about another Journal question?
[Use tag “isomers”]

In this power point, you’ve seen data indicating that the
five isomers of C6H14 have different physical properties.
With reference to the slides on properties of alkanes,
explain the relative melting and boiling points of these
isomers. That is, look at the shapes of the molecules (the
amount of branching) and explain how the shapes
correlate with the melting and boiling points.

                                                             41
10.3 Cycloalkanes

Cycloalkanes have two fewer hydrogens than the
corresponding chain alkane.

  hexane, C6H14



  cyclohexane, C6H12



The general formula for a cycloalkane is CnH2n.

                                                  42
10.3 Cycloalkanes

To name cycloalkanes, add the prefix cyclo- to the name
of the corresponding alkane.

Place substituents in alphabetical order before the base
name as for alkanes.

For multiple substituents, use the lowest possible set of
numbers; a single substituent requires no number.



                                                            43
10.3 Cycloalkanes


Cyclopropane



Cyclobutane



Cyclohexane



                          44
10.3 Naming cycloalkanes

Name the two cycloalkanes shown.
  Parent chain
     6 carbon ring, cyclohexane
     5 carbon ring, cyclopentane
  Substituent
     1 chlorine atom, chloro-
     1 methyl group, methyl-
                                                     chlorocyclohexane




                                methylcyclopentane

                                                                     45
10.3 cis-trans isomers in cycloalkanes

Atoms of an alkane can rotate freely around the carbon-
carbon single bond having an unlimited number of
arrangements.
Rotation around the bonds in a cyclic structure is limited
by the fact that all carbons in the ring are interlocked.
Formation of cis-trans (geometric) isomers is a
consequence of the lack of free rotation around bonds.
Stereoisomers are molecules that have the same
structural formulas and bonding patterns, but different
arrangements of atoms in space.           See “Videos with
                                       Models” in “Powerpoints
                                       and Related Materials”
                                         folder for Module 1


                                                                 46
10.3 cis-trans isomers in cycloalkanes
Two groups may be on the same side (cis) of the imagined plane of
the cyclo-ring or they may be on the opposite side (trans).
Geometric isomers do not readily interconvert, because this would
involve bond breaking and re-formation.




                                                                47
10.3 Practice with cycloalkanes

Name the following compounds:

                         pencast




                                        48
10.3 Practice with cycloalkanes

Draw structures for the following compounds.

  trans-1,4-dimethylcyclooctane



  cis-1,3-dichlorocyclohexane              pencast




  cis-1-bromo-2-fluoro-cyclobutane



                                                     49
10.4 Conformations of alkanes

Geometric isomers have the same number of atoms of
each type, but are bonded together differently.
  Bonds must be broken to change one geometric isomer into
  another.



Conformers are identical molecules that are arranged
differently in space (rotation around single bonds).
  An intact molecule can be changed from one conformation to
  another.


                                                               50
10.4 Ethane and butane

In an eclipsed conformation, groups on the front and
back carbons are aligned when we look down the bond.




                                                       51
10.4 Ethane and butane

In a staggered conformation, groups on the front and
back carbons are not aligned when we look down the
bond.




             See “Videos with
          Models” in “Powerpoints
          and Related Materials”
            folder for Module 1



                                                       52
10.4 Journal

Last Journal question for this Module
[Use tag “butanes”]

Consider the molecules butane and cyclobutane.
  If two substituents are added to cyclobutane, they can be cis- or
  trans-. If two substituents are added to butane, these is no
  possibility of cis- and trans- isomers;
  however,
   butane has conformers, and cyclobutane does not.
Explain these two observations in terms of the structures
of butane and cyclobutane, and the definitions of cis- and
trans- isomers and conformers.
                                                                  53
10.4 Cyclohexane

Because of the 109.5o carbon-
carbon bonds, a cyclohexane ring
doesn’t lie flat, but is puckered.

  “Boat” conformation: both ends
  puckered up.

  “Chair” conformation: one end up,
  one end down.




                                      54
10.4 Cyclohexane

The chair conformation of cyclohexane is more stable
than the boat conformation because the hydrogens are
less crowded.




                                                       55
10.4 Cyclohexane

On each carbon in the
cyclohexane ring, one
hydrogen is vertical to a
plane through the ring.     See “Videos with
                               Models” in
                             “Powerpoints
These are the axial           and Related
                            Materials” folder

hydrogens.                    for Module 1




The second hydrogen on
each carbon is the
equatorial hydrogen.

                                                56
10.5 Reactions: Combustion

Alkanes and cycloalkanes react with oxygen to produce
carbon dioxide and water.
  This is an oxidation reaction…
  …but we usually call it combustion.


What’s wrong with this equation for the combustion of
methane?
                CH4 + O2  CO2 + H2O


                                                        57
10.5 Reactions: Combustion

Guidelines for balancing combustion reactions:
  Balance carbon using CO2 product molecules.
  Balance hydrogen using H2O product molecules.
  Balance oxygen using O2 reactant molecules.


Write a balanced chemical equation for the combustion
of the following compounds:
  pentane
  cyclopropane
  2-methylhexane


                                                        58
10.5 Reactions: Halogenation

In a substitution reaction, one atom substitutes for
another on a molecule.
Halogenation is the replacement of a hydrogen on an
alkane with a halogen atom.
Since alkanes and cycloalkanes aren’t very reactive, heat
or light must be present for halogenation to take place.




                                                            59
10.5 Reactions: Halogenation

  Terminology: If one halogen is added per molecule:
       monochlorination
       monobromination
  If all the hydrogens in the molecule are not equivalent, a
  mixture of products will form.

3-D, rotatable model                                       3-D, rotatable model




                       1-chloropropane   2-chloropropane
  What are all the possible monochlorination products of
  pentane?                              pencast


                                                                              60
10.5 Reactions: Halogenation

If the halogenation reaction is allowed to continue, more
than one halogen may add to each molecule.

              CH4 + ½ Cl2  CH3Cl + HCl
              CH4 + Cl2  CH2Cl2 + 2 HCl
            CH4 + 3/2 Cl2  CHCl3 + 3 HCl
              CH4 + 2 Cl2  CCl4 + 4 HCl




                                                            61
End-of-chapter notes

Summary of reactions for the class of compounds studied in
the chapter
  Know what reactions these compounds undergo.
  Know what the reactants and products are.
  Know what the conditions for reaction are.
  Be able to write a balanced equation for each reaction.
Key terms
  These should all be familiar to you by the time we finish the chapter.
  Know definitions for these terms—you’ll need them in later chapters.
Summary for each section of the chapter
  If you don’t understand everything in the chapter summaries, go back
  and figure out what it means!
                                                                       62

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10 introduction-to-organic-chemistry-alkanes

  • 1. Chapter 10 An Introduction to Organic Chemistry 1
  • 2. 10.1 The chemistry of carbon Why are there so many carbon-based compounds? Carbon atoms form stable, covalent bonds with each other. Carbon atoms form stable bonds with other elements, such as oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and halogens. Carbon atoms form multiple bonds with: other carbon atoms (double & triple); oxygen (double); nitrogen (double & triple). Carbon atoms can be arranged in linear chains, branched chains, and cyclic structures. 2
  • 3. 10.1 Organic/inorganic compound differences • Bond type – Organics have covalent bonds • Electron sharing – Inorganics usually have ionic bonds • Electron transfer • Structure – Organics • Molecules • Nonelectrolytes – Inorganics • Three-dimensional crystal structures • Often water-soluble, dissociating into ions -electrolytes 3
  • 4. 10.1 Organic/inorganic compound differences • Melting point & boiling point – Organics have covalent bonds • Intermolecular forces broken fairly easily – Inorganics usually have ionic bonds • Ionic bonds require more energy to break • Water solubility – Organics • Nonpolar, water insoluble – Inorganics • Water-soluble, readily dissociate 4
  • 5. 10.1 Functional groups Groups of atoms that cause organic compounds to exhibit particular properties are called functional groups. e.g., alcohols always have an –OH group. We’ll be studying organic chemistry by functional group. 5
  • 6. 10.1 Functional groups Alkenes contain a double bond between adjacent carbon atoms. Alkynes contain a triple bond. 6
  • 7. 10.1 Functional groups An alcohol contains the hydroxyl (-OH) functional group. In an ether, an oxygen atom is bonded to two carbon atoms. 7
  • 8. 10.1 Functional groups An aldehyde contains a carbonyl group (C=O), which is a carbon atom with a double bond to an oxygen atom. In a ketone, the carbon of the carbonyl group is attached to two other carbon atoms. 8
  • 9. 10.1 Functional groups Carboxylic acids contain the carboxyl group, which is a carbonyl group attached to a hydroxyl group. An ester contains the carboxyl group between carbon atoms. 9
  • 10. 10.1 Functional groups In amines, the functional group is a nitrogen atom. In amides, the hydroxyl group of a carboxylic acid is replaced by a nitrogen group. 10
  • 11. 10.2 Alkanes Hydrocarbons are compounds composed only of carbon and hydrogen. Saturated hydrocarbons have only single bonds. Unsaturated hydrocarbons have one or more double and/or triple bonds. Saturated hydrocarbons are called alkanes if they are acyclic. cycloalkanes if they are cyclic. 11
  • 12. 10.2 Sources of alkanes Petroleum, a naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbons, is the main source of alkanes. Liquid petroleum is called crude oil. hydrocarbons with 5 or more carbons Gaseous petroleum is called natural gas. mostly methane, with ethane, propane, and butane 12
  • 13. 10.2 Sources of alkanes 13
  • 14. 10.2 Physical properties of alkanes Alkanes are insoluble in water. Water molecules are polar and can take part in hydrogen bonding. Alkanes are nonpolar. “Like dissolves like.” 14
  • 15. 10.2 Physical properties of alkanes Alkanes have lower boiling points for a given molecular weight than most other organic compounds. Alkanes are nonpolar. Molecules are only weakly held together by van der Waals attractions. Because the attractions are weak, less energy is needed to separate molecules from each other into the gas phase. Therefore, boiling points are lower. 15
  • 16. 10.2 Physical properties of alkanes The boiling points of alkanes rise as the chain length increases and fall as the chains become branched and more nearly spherical. 16
  • 17. 10.2 Physical properties of alkanes 17
  • 18. 10.2 Physical properties of alkanes This is a good place to answer your first Journal question for this module. [Use tag “water”] Table salt (NaCl) dissolves in water, but iodine (I2) does not to any appreciable extent. Explain why this is, in terms of the molecular properties of salt, water, and iodine. 18
  • 19. 10.2 Writing structural formulas Some definitions: Atoms bonded in a “straight” line are in a continuous chain. A branched chain has some carbons branching off the longest continuous chain. 19
  • 20. 10.2 Writing structural formulas Some hints: First, attach the carbon atoms to each other in the correct configuration. Add hydrogen atoms until each carbon atom has four bonds. Structural formula of C3H8 pencast 20
  • 21. 10.2 Abbreviated structural formulas Writing out every atom and bond individually is inconvenient. Abbreviated structural formulas list each carbon with its hydrogens, adjacent to other carbons it is bonded to. ethanol and dimethyl ether pencast n-pentane, 2,2-dimethylpropane pencast 21
  • 22. 10.2 Abbreviated structural formulas Line structures use no element symbols. show only carbon-carbon bonds. Line structures for n-pentane 2-methyl-butane 2,2-dimethylpropane pencast 22
  • 23. 10.2 Structures of alkanes All alkanes fit the same general molecular formula. CnH2n+2 where n = number of carbons Normal alkanes (n-alkanes) have carbon chains that are unbranched. A group of alkanes that each has one more –CH2– group is called a homologous series. Properties of the molecules are similar. Properties change gradually as carbon atoms are added. 23
  • 24. 10.2 Structures of alkanes 24
  • 25. 10.2 Structures of alkanes Which of the following are alkanes? C7H18 C7H16 C8H16 C27H56 25
  • 26. 10.2 Alkyl groups An alkyl group is an alkane with one hydrogen atom removed It is named by replacing the -ane of the alkane name with –yl Methane becomes a methyl group. CH4 – H = -CH3 Ethane becomes an ethyl group. CH3CH3 – H = -CH2CH3 26
  • 28. 10.2 Alkyl groups Alkyl groups are classified according to the number of carbons attached to the carbon atom that joins the alkyl group to a molecule. A primary carbon (1o) is directly bonded to one other carbon. A secondary carbon (2o) is directly bonded to two other carbons. A tertiary carbon (3o) is directly bonded to three other carbons. A quaternary carbon (4o) is directly bonded to four other carbons. 28
  • 30. 10.2 Nomenclature Organic compounds were initially named after their source, use, and properties. There are now over 15 million organic compounds known! Clearly, it is necessary to have a systematic method for naming. Every compound must have a unique name. Structure must be determinable from the name. The name must be determinable from the structure. The system we use is called IUPAC. It was devised by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. 30
  • 31. 10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes The –ane ending is used for all alkanes. Alkanes without branching are named by the number of carbon atoms. For branched alkanes, the root name is the one for the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms. Groups attached to the main chain are called substituents. Saturated groups composed of carbon and hydrogen are called alkyl groups. Alkyl groups are named after the corresponding alkane, with –yl replacing –ane. 31
  • 32. 10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes The main chain is numbered so the first substituent has the lowest possible number. All substituent names are preceded by the number of the carbon they are attached to. If there are two or more identical substituents, there are two or more numbers preceding the name, and a prefix (di-, tri-, tetra-, . . .) on the substituent name. If two or more different substituents are present, they are listed alphabetically (ignoring any number prefix). The only punctuation used is commas to separate numbers from each other. hyphens to separate letters from numbers. 32
  • 33. 10.2 IUPAC rules for naming alkanes Give the IUPAC names for the following compounds: pencast pencast 33
  • 34. 10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents Alkyl groups are named by changing the –ane ending of alkanes to –yl. methyl CH3- ethyl CH3CH2- n-propyl CH3CH2CH2- isopropyl (1-methylethyl) CH3CHCH3 butyl CH3CH2CH2CH2- sec-butyl (1-methylpropyl) CH3CH2CH2CH2 isobutyl (2-methylpropyl) (CH3)2CHCH2- tert-butyl (1,1-dimethylethyl) (CH3)3C- 34
  • 35. 10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents Halogen substituents are named by changing the –ine ending of the element to –o. fluoro- F- chloro- Cl- bromo- Br- iodo- I- R is a general symbol for an alkyl group. R-H is any alkane. R-Cl or R-F or R-Br or R-I stand for alkyl halides. 35
  • 36. 10.2 Alkyl and halogen substituents Give a IUPAC name for CH2ClF. Write a formula for each compound. 1,1,1,-trichlorodecane pencast 3,3,5-trimethylpentane Name the following compounds. CH3CH2CH(CH2CH3)CH2CH2CH3 pencast CH3C(CH3)2CH(CH2CH3)CH2CH2CH3 pencast 36
  • 37. 10.2 Use of the IUPAC rules 2-methylpentane (not 4-methylpentane) 3-methylhexane (not 2-ethylpentane or 4-methylhexane) 2,2-dimethylbutane (not 2,2-methylbutane or 2-dimethylbutane) 3-bromo-1-chlorobutane (not 1-chloro-3-bromobutane or 2-bromo-4-chlorobutane) 37
  • 38. 10.2 Isomerism If more than one arrangement is possible for a given molecular formula, the different arrangements are called isomers. Structural isomers have the same molecular formula but different structural formulas. Consider the molecular formula C3H7Cl. isomer 1 isomer 2 38
  • 39. 10.2 Isomerism There are 5 structural isomers of C6H14. pencast Draw the 5 isomers and name them. 39
  • 40. 10.2 Isomerism Although all 5 isomers have the same molecular formula, their physical properties vary. 40
  • 41. 10.2 Isomerism How about another Journal question? [Use tag “isomers”] In this power point, you’ve seen data indicating that the five isomers of C6H14 have different physical properties. With reference to the slides on properties of alkanes, explain the relative melting and boiling points of these isomers. That is, look at the shapes of the molecules (the amount of branching) and explain how the shapes correlate with the melting and boiling points. 41
  • 42. 10.3 Cycloalkanes Cycloalkanes have two fewer hydrogens than the corresponding chain alkane. hexane, C6H14 cyclohexane, C6H12 The general formula for a cycloalkane is CnH2n. 42
  • 43. 10.3 Cycloalkanes To name cycloalkanes, add the prefix cyclo- to the name of the corresponding alkane. Place substituents in alphabetical order before the base name as for alkanes. For multiple substituents, use the lowest possible set of numbers; a single substituent requires no number. 43
  • 45. 10.3 Naming cycloalkanes Name the two cycloalkanes shown. Parent chain 6 carbon ring, cyclohexane 5 carbon ring, cyclopentane Substituent 1 chlorine atom, chloro- 1 methyl group, methyl- chlorocyclohexane methylcyclopentane 45
  • 46. 10.3 cis-trans isomers in cycloalkanes Atoms of an alkane can rotate freely around the carbon- carbon single bond having an unlimited number of arrangements. Rotation around the bonds in a cyclic structure is limited by the fact that all carbons in the ring are interlocked. Formation of cis-trans (geometric) isomers is a consequence of the lack of free rotation around bonds. Stereoisomers are molecules that have the same structural formulas and bonding patterns, but different arrangements of atoms in space. See “Videos with Models” in “Powerpoints and Related Materials” folder for Module 1 46
  • 47. 10.3 cis-trans isomers in cycloalkanes Two groups may be on the same side (cis) of the imagined plane of the cyclo-ring or they may be on the opposite side (trans). Geometric isomers do not readily interconvert, because this would involve bond breaking and re-formation. 47
  • 48. 10.3 Practice with cycloalkanes Name the following compounds: pencast 48
  • 49. 10.3 Practice with cycloalkanes Draw structures for the following compounds. trans-1,4-dimethylcyclooctane cis-1,3-dichlorocyclohexane pencast cis-1-bromo-2-fluoro-cyclobutane 49
  • 50. 10.4 Conformations of alkanes Geometric isomers have the same number of atoms of each type, but are bonded together differently. Bonds must be broken to change one geometric isomer into another. Conformers are identical molecules that are arranged differently in space (rotation around single bonds). An intact molecule can be changed from one conformation to another. 50
  • 51. 10.4 Ethane and butane In an eclipsed conformation, groups on the front and back carbons are aligned when we look down the bond. 51
  • 52. 10.4 Ethane and butane In a staggered conformation, groups on the front and back carbons are not aligned when we look down the bond. See “Videos with Models” in “Powerpoints and Related Materials” folder for Module 1 52
  • 53. 10.4 Journal Last Journal question for this Module [Use tag “butanes”] Consider the molecules butane and cyclobutane. If two substituents are added to cyclobutane, they can be cis- or trans-. If two substituents are added to butane, these is no possibility of cis- and trans- isomers; however, butane has conformers, and cyclobutane does not. Explain these two observations in terms of the structures of butane and cyclobutane, and the definitions of cis- and trans- isomers and conformers. 53
  • 54. 10.4 Cyclohexane Because of the 109.5o carbon- carbon bonds, a cyclohexane ring doesn’t lie flat, but is puckered. “Boat” conformation: both ends puckered up. “Chair” conformation: one end up, one end down. 54
  • 55. 10.4 Cyclohexane The chair conformation of cyclohexane is more stable than the boat conformation because the hydrogens are less crowded. 55
  • 56. 10.4 Cyclohexane On each carbon in the cyclohexane ring, one hydrogen is vertical to a plane through the ring. See “Videos with Models” in “Powerpoints These are the axial and Related Materials” folder hydrogens. for Module 1 The second hydrogen on each carbon is the equatorial hydrogen. 56
  • 57. 10.5 Reactions: Combustion Alkanes and cycloalkanes react with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water. This is an oxidation reaction… …but we usually call it combustion. What’s wrong with this equation for the combustion of methane? CH4 + O2  CO2 + H2O 57
  • 58. 10.5 Reactions: Combustion Guidelines for balancing combustion reactions: Balance carbon using CO2 product molecules. Balance hydrogen using H2O product molecules. Balance oxygen using O2 reactant molecules. Write a balanced chemical equation for the combustion of the following compounds: pentane cyclopropane 2-methylhexane 58
  • 59. 10.5 Reactions: Halogenation In a substitution reaction, one atom substitutes for another on a molecule. Halogenation is the replacement of a hydrogen on an alkane with a halogen atom. Since alkanes and cycloalkanes aren’t very reactive, heat or light must be present for halogenation to take place. 59
  • 60. 10.5 Reactions: Halogenation Terminology: If one halogen is added per molecule: monochlorination monobromination If all the hydrogens in the molecule are not equivalent, a mixture of products will form. 3-D, rotatable model 3-D, rotatable model 1-chloropropane 2-chloropropane What are all the possible monochlorination products of pentane? pencast 60
  • 61. 10.5 Reactions: Halogenation If the halogenation reaction is allowed to continue, more than one halogen may add to each molecule. CH4 + ½ Cl2  CH3Cl + HCl CH4 + Cl2  CH2Cl2 + 2 HCl CH4 + 3/2 Cl2  CHCl3 + 3 HCl CH4 + 2 Cl2  CCl4 + 4 HCl 61
  • 62. End-of-chapter notes Summary of reactions for the class of compounds studied in the chapter Know what reactions these compounds undergo. Know what the reactants and products are. Know what the conditions for reaction are. Be able to write a balanced equation for each reaction. Key terms These should all be familiar to you by the time we finish the chapter. Know definitions for these terms—you’ll need them in later chapters. Summary for each section of the chapter If you don’t understand everything in the chapter summaries, go back and figure out what it means! 62

Editor's Notes

  1. ethanol: CH3CH2OHdimethyl ether: CH3OCH3n-pentane: CH3CH2CH2CH2CH32,2-dimethylpropane: CH3C(CH3)2CH3
  2. The second and fourth compounds are alkanes because they follow the formula rule for alkanes, CnH2n+2
  3. 2-methylbutane2,2-dimethylpentane2,2-dimethylpropane
  4. Names of last two compounds:3-ethylhexane2,2-dimethyl-3-ethylhexane
  5. From left to right:trans-1-bromo-2-ethylcyclobutanetrans-1,2-dimethylcyclopropanecis-1-bromo-4-chlorocycloheptanepropylcyclohexane
  6. pentane (CnH2n+2):C5H12 + 8 O2 5 CO2 + 6 H2O cyclopropane (CnH2n): 2 C3H6 + 9 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O2-methylhexane (CnH2n+2, n=7): C7H16 + 11 O2 7 CO2 + 8 H2O