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1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 1 EQA M O D U L E 4 ORGANIC CHEMISTRY: STRUCTURE AND NOMENCLATURE OF HYDROCARBONS O1.1 What Is an Organic Compound? O1.2 The Saturated Hydrocarbons, or Alkanes O1.3 The Cycloalkanes O1.4 Rotation around C—C Bonds O1.5 The Nomenclature of Alkanes O1.6 The Unsaturated Hydrocarbons: Alkenes and Alkynes O1.7 Alkene Stereoisomers O1.8 The Reactions of Alkanes, Alkenes, and Alkynes O1.9 Naturally Occurring Hydrocarbons and Their Derivatives O1.10 Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Their Derivatives O1.11 The Chemistry of Petroleum Products O1.12 The Chemistry of Coal O1.13 Chiral Stereoisomers O1.14 Optical Activity O1.1 WHAT IS AN ORGANIC COMPOUND? When you drive up to the pump at some gas stations you are faced with a variety of choices. As you filled the tank, you might wonder, “What is ‘unleaded’ gas, and why would anyone want to add ‘lead’ to gas?” Or, “What would I get for my money if I bought premium gas, with a higher octane number?” Or, “What would happen if I filled the tank at the pump marked ‘diesel’?” You then stop to buy drugs for a sore back that has been bothering you since you helped a friend move into a new apartment. Once again, you are faced with choices (see Figure O1.1). You could buy aspirin, which has been used for more than a hundred years. Or Tylenol, which contains acetaminophen. Or a more modern pain-killer, such as ibuprofen. While you are deciding which drug to buy, you might wonder, “What is the difference between these drugs?,” and even, “How do they work?” 1 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 2 2 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS OH O B CH3 H EC H OH CH OP EOH C O B OOC O CH3 Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) CH3 H E NH C B Tylenol O (acetaminophen) CH3 H ECH2 CH CH3 Advil (ibuprofen) FIGURE O1.1 The structures of the active ingredients in three common painkillers. You then drive to campus, where you sit in a “plastic” chair to eat a sandwich that has been wrapped in “plastic,” without worrying about why one of the plastics is flexibile while the other is rigid. While you’re eating, a friend stops by and starts to tease you about the effect of your diet on the level of cholesterol in your blood, which brings up the questions, “What is cholesterol?” and “Why do so many people worry about it?” Answers to each of these questions fall within the realm of a field known as organic chemistry. For more than 200 years, chemists have divided materials into two categories. Those isolated from plants and animals were classified as organic, while those that trace back to minerals were inorganic. At one time, chemists believed that organic compounds were fundamentally different from those that were inorganic because organic compounds contained a vital force that was only found in living systems. The first step in the decline of the vital force theory occurred in 1828, when Friederich Wöhler synthesized urea from inorganic starting materials. Wöhler was trying to make ammonium cyanate (NH4OCN) from silver cyanate (AgOCN) and ammonium chloride (NH4Cl). What he expected is described by the following equation. AgOCN(aq) NH4Cl(aq) 88n AgCl(s) NH4OCN(aq) The product he isolated from the reaction, however, had none of the properties of cyanate compounds. It was a white, crystalline material that was identical to urea, H2NCONH2, which could be isolated from urine. Expected Product H A HONOH A H Ammonium cyanate OOCqN Observed Product O H H B G D NOCON D G H H Urea Neither Wöhler nor his contemporaries claimed that his results disproved the vital force theory. But his results set in motion a series of experiments that led to the synthesis of a variety of organic compounds from inorganic starting materials. This inevitably led to the disappearance of “vital force” from the list of theories that had any relevance to chemistry, although it did not lead to the death of the theory, which still had proponents more than 90 years later. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/22/05 7:41 Page 3 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 3 If the difference between organic and inorganic compounds isn’t the presence of some mysterious vital force required for their synthesis, what is the basis for distinguishing between these classes of compounds? Most compounds extracted from living organisms contain carbon. It is therefore tempting to identify organic chemistry as the chemistry of carbon. But that definition would include compounds such as calcium carbonate (CaCO3) as well as the elemental forms of carbon—diamond and graphite—that are clearly inorganic. We will therefore define organic chemistry as the chemistry of compounds that contain both carbon and hydrogen. Even though organic chemistry focuses on compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen, more than 95% of the compounds that have been isolated from natural sources or synthesized in the laboratory are organic. The special role of carbon in the chemistry of the elements is the result of a combination of factors, including the number of valence electrons on a neutral carbon atom, the electronegativity of carbon, and the atomic radius of carbon atoms (see Table O1.1). TABLE O1.1 Physical Properties of Carbon Electronic configuration Electronegativity Covalent radius 1s2 2s2 2p2 2.54 0.077 nm Carbon has four valence electrons (2s2 2p2), and it must either gain four electrons or lose four electrons to reach a rare gas configuration. The electronegativity of carbon is too small for carbon to gain electrons from most elements to form C4 ions, and too large for carbon to lose electrons to form C4 ions. Carbon therefore forms covalent bonds with a large number of other elements, including the hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur found in living systems. Because they are relatively small, carbon atoms can come close enough together to form strong CPC double bonds or even CqC triple bonds. Carbon also forms strong double and triple bonds to nitrogen and oxygen. It can even form double bonds to elements such as phosphorus and sulfur that do not form double bonds to themselves. When the unmanned Viking spacecraft carried out experiments designed to search for evidence of life on Mars, the experiments were based on the assumption that living systems contain carbon, and the absence of any evidence for carbon-based life on that planet was presumed to mean that no life existed. Several factors make carbon essential to life. • • • Carbon atoms form strong bonds to other carbon atoms. Carbon forms strong bonds to other nonmetals, such as N, O, P, and S. Carbon forms multiple bonds to other nonmetals, including C, N, O, P, and S atoms. These factors provide an almost infinite variety of potential structures for organic compounds, such as vitamin C shown in Figure O1.2. No other element can provide the variety of combinations and permutations necessary for life to exist. O1.2 THE SATURATED HYDROCARBONS, OR ALKANES Compounds that contain only carbon and hydrogen are known as hydrocarbons. Those that contain as many hydrogen atoms as possible are said to be saturated. The saturated hydrocarbons are also known as alkanes. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 4 4 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS O HO C C HO C O CH CH O CH2OH OH FIGURE O1.2 Structure of vitamin C. The simplest alkane is methane: CH4. The Lewis structure of methane can be generated by combining the four electrons in the valence shell of a neutral carbon atom with four hydrogen atoms to form a compound in which the carbon atom shares a total of eight valence electrons with the four hydrogen atoms. HT H HT TP CT R TH H C H H P H Methane is an example of a general rule that carbon is tetravalent; it forms a total of four bonds in almost all of its compounds. To minimize the repulsion between pairs of electrons in the four COH bonds, the geometry around the carbon atom is tetrahedral, as shown in Figure O1.3. FIGURE O1.3 Ball-and-stick model of methane. Exercise O1.1 Use the fact that carbon is usually tetravalent to predict the formula of ethane, the alkane that contains two carbon atoms. Solution As a rule, compounds that contain more than one carbon atom are held together by COC bonds. If we assume that carbon is tetravalent, the formula of the compound must be C2H6. H H A A HOCOCOH A A H H Ethane 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 5 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 5 The alkane that contains three carbon atoms is known as propane, which has the formula C3H8 and the following skeleton structure. H H H A A A HOCOCOCOH A A A H H H Propane The four-carbon alkane is butane, with the formula C4H10. H H H H A A A A HOCOCOCOCOH A A A A H H H H Butane The names, formulas, and physical properties for a variety of alkanes with the generic formula CnH2n2 are given in Table O1.2. The boiling points of the alkanes gradually increase with the molecular weight of the compounds. At room temperature, the lighter alkanes are gases; the midweight alkanes are liquids; and the heavier alkanes are solids, or tars. TABLE O1.2 The Saturated Hydrocarbons, or Alkanes Name Molecular Formula Melting Point (oC) Boiling Point (oC) State at 25oC Methane Ethane Propane Butane Pentane Hexane Heptane Octane Nonane Decane Undecane Dodecane Eicosane Triacontane CH4 C2H6 C3H8 C4H10 C5H12 C6H14 C7H16 C8H18 C9H20 C10H22 C11H24 C12H26 C20H42 C30H62 182.5 183.3 189.7 138.4 129.7 95 90.6 56.8 51 29.7 24.6 9.6 36.8 65.8 164 88.6 42.1 0.5 36.1 68.9 98.4 124.7 150.8 174.1 195.9 216.3 343 449.7 Gas Gas Gas Gas Liquid Liquid Liquid Liquid Liquid Liquid Liquid Liquid Solid Solid The alkanes in Table O1.2 are all examples of straight-chain hydrocarbons, in which the carbon atoms form a chain that runs from one end of the molecule to the other. The generic formula for the compounds can be understood by assuming that they contain chains of CH2 groups with an additional hydrogen atom capping either end of the chain. Thus, for every n carbon atoms there must be 2n 2 hydrogen atoms: CnH2n2. Because two points define a line, the carbon skeleton of the ethane molecule is linear, as shown in Figure O1.4. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 6 6 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS FIGURE O1.4 A molecule of ethane. Because the bond angle in a tetrahedron is 109.5°, alkane molecules that contain three or carbon atoms can no longer be thought of as “linear,” as shown in Figure O1.5. Propane Butane FIGURE O1.5 Ball-and-stick models of propane and butane. In addition to the straight-chain examples considered so far, alkanes also form branched structures. The smallest hydrocarbon in which a branch can occur has four carbon atoms. The compound has the same formula as butane (C4H10), but a different structure. Compounds with the same formula and different structures are known as isomers (from the Greek words isos, “equal,” and meros, “parts”). When it was first discovered, the branched isomer with the formula C4H10 was therefore given the name isobutane. CH3 A CH3OCHOCH3 Isobutane The best way to understand the difference between the structures of butane and isobutane is to compare the ball-and-stick models of the compounds shown in Figure O1.6. Butane Isobutane FIGURE O1.6 The two isomers with the formula C4H10. Butane and isobutane are called constitutional isomers because they literally differ in their constitution. One contains two CH3 groups and two CH2 groups; the other contains three CH3 groups and one CH group. There are three constitutional isomers of pentane, C5H12. The first is “normal” pentane, or n-pentane. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 7 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS CH3OCH2OCH2OCH2OCH3 7 n-Pentane A branched isomer is also possible, which was originally named isopentane. When a more highly branched isomer was discovered, it was named neopentane (the new isomer of pentane). CH3 A CH3OCHOCH2OCH3 CH3 A CH3OC OCH3 A CH3 Isopentane Neopentane Ball-and-stick models of the three isomers with the formula C5H12 are shown in Figure O1.7. n-Pentane Isopentane Neopentane FIGURE O1.7 The three isomers with the formula C5H12. Exercise O1.2 The following structures all have the same molecular formula: C6H14. Which of the structures represent the same molecule? 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 8 8 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS CH3 CH3 G CHOCH2 D G CH3 A CH2OCH3 CH3 G D CH A CH2 G CH2 B A CH3 CH3 A CH3OCOCH3 A C CH2 G CH3 Solution There is no difference between compounds A and B; they both contain a five-carbon chain with a branch on the second carbon. Compound C, on the other hand, contains a fourcarbon chain with two branches on the second carbon atom. Exercise O1.3 Determine the number of constitutional isomers of hexane, C6H14. Solution There are five constitutional isomers of hexane. There is a straight-chain, or normal, isomer. CH3OCH2OCH2OCH2OCH2OCH3 There are two isomers with a single carbon branch. CH3 A CH3OCHOCH2OCH2OCH3 CH3 A CH3OCH2OCHOCH2OCH3 And there are two isomers with two branches. CH3 CH3 A A CH3OCHOCHOCH3 CH3 A CH3OCOCH2OCH3 A CH3 Checkpoint Use a set of molecular models to confirm that the following compounds are isomers, CH3 CH3 A A CH3OCHOCHOCH3 CH3 A CH3OCOCH2OCH3 A CH3 whereas the following are different ways of writing the structure of the same compound. CH3 CH3 A A CH3OCHOCHOCH3 CH3 A CH3OCHOCHOCH3 A CH3 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:59 Page 9 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 9 As we have seen, there are two constitutional isomers with the formula C4H10, three isomers of C5H12, and five isomers of C6H14. The number of isomers of a compound increases rapidly with additional carbon atoms. There are over 4 billion isomers for C30H62, for example. O1.3 THE CYCLOALKANES If the carbon chain that forms the backbone of a straight-chain hydrocarbon is long enough, we can envision the two ends coming together to form a cycloalkane. One hydrogen atom has to be removed from each end of the hydrocarbon chain to form the COC bond that closes the ring. Cycloalkanes therefore have two less hydrogen atoms than the parent alkane and a generic formula of CnH2n. The smallest alkane that can form a ring is cyclopropane, C3H6, in which the three carbon atoms lie in the same plane. The angle between adjacent COC bonds is only 60°, which is very much smaller than the 109.5° angle in a tetrahedron, as shown in Figure O1.8. Cyclopropane is therefore susceptible to chemical reactions that can open up the threemembered ring. FIGURE O1.8 Ball-and-stick model of cyclopropane. Any attempt to force the four carbons that form a cyclobutane ring into a plane of atoms would produce the structure shown in Figure O1.9, in which the angle between adjacent COC bonds would be 90°. One of the four carbon atoms in the cyclobutane ring is therefore displaced from the plane of the other three to form a “puckered” structure that is vaguely reminiscent of the wings of a butterfly. FIGURE O1.9 Cyclobutane. The angle between adjacent COC bonds in a planar cyclopentane molecule would be 108°, which is close to the ideal angle around a tetrahedral carbon atom. Cyclopentane is not a planar molecule, as shown in Figure O1.10, because displacing two of the carbon atoms from the plane of the other three produces a puckered structure that relieves some of the repulsion between the hydrogen atoms on adjacent carbon atoms in the ring. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 10 10 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS FIGURE O1.10 Structure of cyclopentane. By the time we get to the six-membered ring in cyclohexane, a puckered structure can be formed by displacing a pair of carbon atoms at either end of the ring from the plane of the other four members of the ring. One of the carbon atoms is tilted up, out of the ring, whereas the other is tilted down to form the “chair” structure shown in Figure O1.11. FIGURE O1.11 Chair form of cyclohexane. O1.4 ROTATION AROUND COC BONDS It is easy to fall into the trap of thinking about the ethane molecule as if it were static. Nothing could be further from the truth. At room temperature, the average velocity of an ethane molecule is about 500 m/s—more than twice the speed of a Boeing 747. While it moves through space, the molecule is tumbling around its center of gravity like an airplane out of control. At the same time, the COH and COC bonds are vibrating like springs at rates as fast as 9 1013 s1. There is another way in which the ethane molecule can move. The CH3 groups at either end of the molecule can rotate with respect to each other around the COC bond. When this happens, the molecule passes through an infinite number of conformations that have slightly different energies. The highest energy conformation corresponds to a structure in which the hydrogen atoms are “eclipsed.” If we view the molecule along the COC bond, the hydrogen atoms on one CH3 group would obscure those on the other, as shown in Figure O1.12. FIGURE O1.12 The eclipsed conformation of ethane. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 17:14 Page 11 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 11 The lowest energy conformation is a structure in which the hydrogen atoms are “staggered,” as shown in Figure O1.13. FIGURE O1.13 The staggered conformation of ethane. The difference between the eclipsed and staggered conformations of ethane are best illustrated by viewing these molecules along the COC bond, as shown in Figure O1.14. Staggered Eclipsed FIGURE O1.14 The eclipsed and staggered conformations of ethane viewed along the COC bond. The difference between the energies of these conformations is relatively small, only about 12 kJ/mol. But it is large enough that rotation around the COC bond isn’t smooth. Although the frequency of the rotation is on the order of 1010 revolutions per second, the ethane molecule spends a slightly larger percentage of the time in the staggered conformation. The different conformations of a molecule are often described in terms of Newman projections. These line drawings show the six substituents on the COC bond as if the structure of the molecule were projected onto a piece of paper by shining a bright light along the COC bond in a ball-and-stick model of the molecule. Newman projections for the different staggered conformations of butane are shown in Figure O1.15. CH3 H H CH3 CH3 H H H H H CH3 CH3 H H H3C H H H FIGURE O1.15 Newman projections for the staggered conformations of butane. Because of the ease of rotation around COC bonds, there are several conformations of some of the cycloalkanes described in the previous section. Cyclohexane, for example, forms both the “chair” and “boat” conformations shown in Figure O1.16. The difference between the energies of the chair conformation, in which the hydrogen atoms are staggered, and the boat conformation, in which they are eclipsed, is about 30 kJ/mol. As a result, even though the rate at which the two conformations interchange is about 1 105 s1, we can assume that most cyclohexane molecules at any moment in time are in the chair conformation. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 12 12 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS Boat Chair FIGURE O1.16 The chair and boat conformations of cyclohexane. O1.5 THE NOMENCLATURE OF ALKANES Common names such as pentane, isopentane, and neopentane are sufficient to differentiate between the three isomers with the formula C5H12. They become less useful, however, as the size of the hydrocarbon chain increases. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) has developed a systematic approach to naming alkanes and cycloalkanes based on the following steps. • Find the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms in the skeleton structure. Name the compound as a derivative of the alkane with that number of carbon atoms. The following compound, for example, is a derivative of pentane because the longest chain contains five carbon atoms. H A HOCOH A H A H H H A A A A A HOCOCOCOCOCOH A A A A A H H H H H • Name the substituents on the chain. Substituents derived from alkanes are named by replacing the -ane ending with -yl. This compound contains a methyl (OCH3) substituent. H A HOCOH A H A H H H A A A A A HOCOCOCOCOCOH A A A A A H H H H H • Number the chain starting at the end nearest the first substituent and specify the carbon atoms on which the substituents are located. Use the lowest possible numbers. This compound, for example, is 2-methylpentane, not 4-methylpentane. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 13 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 13 H A HOCOH A H A H H H A A A A A HOC1OC2OC3OC4OC5OH A A A A A H H H H H • • Use the prefixes di-, tri-, and tetra- to describe substituents that are found two, three, or four times on the same chain of carbon atoms. Arrange the names of the substituents in alphabetical order. Exercise O1.4 Use the IUPAC system to name the following compound. CH3 CH3 A A CH3OCOCH2OCHOCH3 A CH3 Solution The compound is a derivative of pentane because the longest chain contains five carbon atoms. There are three identical CH3 substituents on the backbone. Two of the methyl groups are on the second carbon, and one is on the fourth. The compound is therefore 2,2,4-trimethylpentane. Since it contains a total of eight carbon atoms, it is also known by the common name isooctane. This compound is the “octane” used as a standard against which to measure octane numbers. Exercise O1.5 Use the IUPAC system to name the following compound. CH3 A CH3OCHOCH2OCHOCH2OCH3 A CH2 A CH2 A CH3 Solution The longest continuous chain in the skeleton structure of the compound contains seven carbon atoms. It is therefore named as a derivative of heptane. 1 CH3 A 4 CH3OCHOCH2OCHOCH2OCH3 2 3 A 5 CH2 A 6 CH2 A 7 CH3 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 14 14 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS The heptane chain contains two substituents: a methyl group on the second carbon atom and an ethyl group on the fourth carbon atom. CH3 A CH3OCHOCH2OCHOCH2OCH3 A Methyl Ethyl CH2 A CH2 A CH3 Because the substituents are listed in alphabetical order, the systematic name for the compound is 4-ethyl-2-methylheptane. O1.6 THE UNSATURATED HYDROCARBONS: ALKENES AND ALKYNES Carbon not only forms the strong COC single bonds found in alkanes, it also forms strong CPC double bonds. Compounds that contain CPC double bonds were once known as olefins (literally, “to make an oil”) because they were hard to crystallize. (They tend to remain oily liquids when cooled.) These compounds are now called alkenes. The simplest alkene has the formula C2H4 and the following Lewis structure. HH EH CPC E H H H The relationship between alkanes and alkenes can be understood by thinking about the following hypothetical reaction. We start by breaking the bond in an H2 molecule so that one of the electrons ends up on each of hydrogen atoms. We do the same thing to one of the bonds between the carbon atoms in an alkene. We then allow the unpaired electron on each hydrogen atom to interact with the unpaired electron on a carbon atom to form a new COH bond. HOH HH EH CPC E H H H HT HT POC POH HOC A A H H H H A A HOCOCOH A A H H Thus, in theory, we can transform an alkene into the parent alkane by adding an H2 molecule across a CPC double bond. In practice, the reaction occurs only at high pressures in the presence of a suitable catalyst, such as piece of nickel metal. H H CPC H H H2 Ni H H A A HOC OCOH A A H H 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 17:14 Page 15 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 15 Because an alkene can be thought of as a derivative of an alkane from which an H2 molecule has been removed, the generic formula for an alkene with one CPC double bond is CnH2n. Alkenes are examples of unsaturated hydrocarbons because they have fewer hydrogen atoms than the corresponding alkanes. They were once named by adding the suffix -ene to the name of the substituent that carried the same number of carbon atoms. CH2PCH2 CH2PCH2OCH3 Ethylene Propylene The IUPAC nomenclature for alkenes names the compounds as derivatives of the parent alkanes. The presence of the CPC double bond is indicated by changing the -ane ending on the name of the parent alkane to -ene. CH3OCH3 CH2PCH2 Ethane Ethene CH3OCH2OCH3 CH3OCHPCH2 Propane Propene The location of the CPC double bond in the skeleton structure of the compound is indicated by specifying the number of the carbon atom at which the CPC bond starts. CH2PCHOCH2OCH3 CH3OCHPCHOCH3 1-Butene 2-Butene The names of substituents are then added as prefixes to the name of the alkene. Exercise O1.6 Use the IUPAC system to name the following compound. CH3 A CH3OCHPCOCH2OCHOCH3 A CH3 Solution The compound is a derivative of hexane because the longest carbon chain contains six carbon atoms. It contains a CPC double bond, which means it is a hexene. Because the double bond links the second and third carbon atoms, it is a 2-hexene. Because the CH3 substituents are on the third and fifth carbon atoms, the compound is 3,5-dimethyl-2-hexene. Compounds that contain CqC triple bonds are called alkynes. These compounds have four less hydrogen atoms than the parent alkanes, so the generic formula for an alkyne with a single CqC triple bond is CnH2n2. The simplest alkyne has the formula C2H2 and is known by the common name acetylene. HOCqCOH Acetylene 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 16 16 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS The IUPAC nomenclature for alkynes names the compounds as derivatives of the parent alkane, with the ending -yne replacing -ane. CCH2CH3 CCH2CH3 CH3 A CCH2CHCH2CH3 CH3C HC CH3C 2-Pentyne 1-Butyne 5-Methyl-2-heptyne In addition to compounds that contain one double bond (alkenes) or one triple bond (alkynes), we can also envision compounds with two double bonds (dienes), three double bonds (trienes), or a combination of double and triple bonds. CH3CHPCHCH2C CH CH2 PCHCH PCH2 4-Hexen-1-yne 1,3-Butadiene O1.7 ALKENE STEREOISOMERS The geometry around the CPC double bond in an alkene plays an important role in the chemistry of the compounds. To understand why, let’s return to the hypothetical intermediate from the previous section in which we have a C2H4 molecule with an unpaired electron on each of the carbon atoms. The sigma () bond skeleton in the molecule is formed by the overlap of sp2 hybridized orbitals on each carbon atom with either a 1s orbital on a hydrogen atom or the sp2 hybridized orbital on the other carbon atom. This leaves one unpaired electron in an empty 2p orbital on each carbon atom. The orbitals that hold these electrons interact to form a pi () bond.1 pi bond C C The geometry around a CPC double bond is therefore different from the geometry around a COC single bond. Because of the double bond, the six atoms in a C2H4 molecule must all lie in the same plane, as shown in Figure O1.17. The presence of the bond restricts rotation around a CPC double bond. There is no way to rotate one end of the bond relative to the other without breaking the bond. Because the bond is relatively strong (~270 kJ/mol), rotation around the CPC double bond cannot occur at room temperature. Alkenes therefore form stereoisomers that differ in the way substituents are arranged around the CPC double bond. The isomer with similar substituents on the same side of 1 Students sometimes ask, “Why are there three lines between the carbon atoms in this drawing if there are only two bonds?” The answer is: Both of the curved lines are needed to represent a single bond. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 17 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 17 H C H H C H FIGURE O1.17 The planar C2H4 molecule. the double bond is called the cis isomer, from a Latin stem meaning “on this side.” The isomer in which similar substituents are across from each other, is called the trans isomer, from a Latin stem meaning “across.” Consider, for example, the terms “transcontinental,” or “transAtlantic.” The cis isomer of 2-butene, for example, has both CH3 groups on the same side of the double bond. In the trans isomer the CH3 groups are on opposite sides of the double bond. CH3 CH3 D G CPC D G H H cis-2-Butene H D G CPC D G H CH3 CH3 trans-2-Butene Cis/trans isomers have similar chemical properties but different physical properties. cis-2Butene, for example, freezes at 138.9°C, whereas trans-2-butene freezes at 105.6°C. Exercise O1.7 Name the straight-chain constitutional and stereoisomers of pentene (C5H10). Solution There are two constitutional isomers of pentene in which all the carbon atoms lie in the same chain. CH2 PCHCH2CH2CH3 CH3CH PCHCH2CH3 1-Pentene 2-Pentene There are no cis/trans isomers of 1-pentene because there is only one way of arranging the substituents around the double bond. H CH CH2CH3 D 2 G CPC D G H H Cis and trans isomers are possible, however, for 2-pentene. CH2CH3 D G CPC D G H H CH3 cis-2-Pentene H D G CPC D G H CH2CH3 CH3 trans-2-Pentene 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 18 18 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS O1.8 THE REACTIONS OF ALKANES, ALKENES, AND ALKYNES Alkanes In the absence of a spark or a high-intensity light source, alkanes are generally inert to chemical reactions. However, anyone who has used a match to light a gas burner, or dropped a match onto charcoal coated with lighter fluid, should recognize that alkanes burst into flame in the presence of a spark. It doesn’t matter whether the starting material is the methane found in natural gas, CH4(g) 2 O2(g) 88n CO2(g) 2 H2O(g) the mixture of butane and isobutane used in disposable cigarette lighters, 2 C4H10(g) 13 O2(g) 88n 8 CO2(g) 10 H2O(g) the mixture of C5 to C6 hydrocarbons in charcoal lighter fluid, C5H12(g) 8 O2(g) 88n 5 CO2(g) 6 H2O(g) or the complex mixture of C6 to C8 hydrocarbons in gasoline. 2 C8H18(l) 25 O2(g) 88n 16 CO2(g) 18 H2O(g) Once the reaction is ignited by a spark, the hydrocarbons burn to form CO2 and H2O and give off between 45 and 50 kJ of energy per gram of fuel consumed. In the presence of light, or at high temperatures, alkanes react with halogens to form alkyl halides. Reaction with chlorine gives an alkyl chloride. light CH4(g) Cl2(g) 888n CH3Cl(g) HCl(g) Reaction with bromine gives an alkyl bromide. light CH4(g) Br2(l) 888n CH3Br(g) HBr(g) Alkenes and Alkynes Unsaturated hydrocarbons such as alkenes and alkynes are much more reactive than the parent alkanes. They react rapidly with bromine, for example, to add a Br2 molecule across the CPC double bond. CH3CH P CHCH3 Br2 Br A CH3CHCHCH3 A Br 2,3-Dibromobutane This reaction provides a way to test for alkenes or alkynes. Solutions of bromine in CCl4 have an intense red-orange color. When Br2 in CCl4 is mixed with a sample of an alkane, 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 17:14 Page 19 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 19 no change is initially observed. When it is mixed with an alkene or alkyne, the color of Br2 rapidly disappears. The reaction between 2-butene and bromine to form 2,3-dibromobutane is just one example of the addition reactions of alkenes and alkynes. Hydrogen bromide (HBr) adds across a CPC double bond to form the corresponding alkyl bromide, in which the hydrogen ends up on the carbon atom that had more hydrogen atoms to begin with. Addition of HBr to 2-butene, for example, gives 2-bromobutane. Br A CH3CHCH2CH3 CH3CH P CHCH3 HBr 2-Bromobutane As noted in Section O1.6, H2 adds across double (or triple) bonds in the presence of a suitable catalyst to convert an alkene (or alkyne) to the corresponding alkane. CH3CH P CHCH3 H2 Pt CH3CH2CH2CH3 In the presence of an acid catalyst, it is even possible to add a molecule of water across a CPC double bond. CH3CH P CHCH3 H2O OH A CH3CHCH2CH3 H2SO4 Addition reactions provide a way to add new substituents to a hydrocarbon chain and thereby produce new derivatives of the parent alkanes. In theory, two products can form when an unsymmetric reagent such as HBr is added to an unsymmetric CPC double bond. In practice, only one product is obtained. When HBr is added to 2-methylpropene, for example, the product is 2-bromo-2-methylpropane, not 1-bromo-2-methylpropane. CH3 G C PCH2 HBr D CH3 CH3 A CH3 O C O CH3 A Br CH3 A (not CH3 O CH O CH2Br) In 1870, after careful study of many examples of addition reactions, the Russian chemist Vladimir Markovnikov formulated a rule for predicting the product of the reactions. Markovnikov’s rule states that the hydrogen atom adds to the carbon atom that already has the larger number of hydrogen atoms when HX adds to an alkene. Thus, water (H—OH) adds to propene to form the product in which the OH group is on the middle carbon atom. OH CH3CH PCH2 HOH H CH3CHCH2 H Carbon in the double bond with the most H atoms 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 17:14 Page 20 20 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS O1.9 NATURALLY OCCURRING HYDROCARBONS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES Complex hydrocarbons and their derivatives are found throughout nature. Natural rubber, for example, is a hydrocarbon that contains long chains of alternating CPC double bonds and COC single bonds. CH3 CH3 CH3 A A A CH2H CN ECH2... CN ECH2H C E E E E N CH CH C C C 2 2 ...CH2 A A A H H H Writing the structure of complex hydrocarbons can be simplified by using a line notation in which a carbon atom is assumed to be present wherever a pair of lines intersect and enough hydrogen atoms are present to satisfy the tendency of carbon to form a total of four bonds. ... ... There are a variety of techniques for isolating both pleasant- and foul-smelling compounds known as essential oils from natural sources, particularly from plants. These compounds are not “essential,” in the sense of being vital to life. They were given that name because they give off a distinct “essence,” or smell. The essential oils are used in perfumes and medicines. Some of the compounds can be isolated by gently heating, or steam distilling, the crushed flowers of plants. Others can be extracted into nonpolar solvents or absorbed onto grease-coated cloths in which the plants are wrapped. Many of the essential oils belong to classes of compounds known as terpenes and terpenoids. The terpenes are hydrocarbons that usually contain one or more CPC double bonds. The terpenoids are oxygen-containing analogs of the terpenes. Examples of terpenes include -pinene and -pinene, the primary components of turpentine that give rise to its characteristic odor. CH3 CH3 CH2 B CH3 CH3 -Pinene CH3 -Pinene Camphor and menthol are examples of terpenoids. CH3 CH3 OH CH3 Camphor O Menthol 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 21 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 21 Both of the compounds have a fragrant, penetrating odor and taste cool. Camphor is used as a moth repellent. Menthol is a mild anesthetic that is added to some brands of cigarettes. Although the terpenes and terpenoids discussed so far have very different structures, they have one important property in common: They all contain 10 carbon atoms, neither more nor less. Each of the compounds can be traced back to a reaction in which a pair of five-carbon molecules are fused. Thus, it isn’t surprising that we can also find sesquiterpenes (15 carbon atoms), diterpenes (20 carbons), triterpenes (30 carbons), and so on. Important examples of these compounds include vitamin A and the -carotene that gives carrots their characteristic color. CH3 CH3 CH3 OH CH3 CH3 Vitamin A CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 -Carotene Steroids aren’t terpenes or terpenoids in the literal sense because they don’t contain the characteristic number of carbon atoms. Consider cholesterol, for example, which is one of the most important steroids. CH3 CH3 Cholesterol HO Analysis of the structure suggests the formula C27H46O, which doesn’t fit the pattern expected of a terpenoid. The biosynthetic precursor of the molecule, however, is a 30-carbon triterpene that is converted into cholesterol by a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. By definition, the steroids are compounds that have the basic structure formed by fusing three six-membered rings and a five-membered ring. The most important property of the molecule is the fact that, with the exception of the OOH group on the lower left-hand corner of the molecule, there is nothing about the structure of the compound that would make it soluble in water. In this day of cholesterol-free products, it is useful to question the label on certain products such as peanut butter that are advertised as cholesterol-free. That is like saying that the Sahara desert is rain-free. Peanut butter is made from peanuts and cholesterol isn’t a characteristic ingredient in plants; it is synthesized by animals, particularly mammals. It is 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 22 22 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS also useful to note that placing someone on a cholesterol-free diet won’t reduce their cholesterol level to zero. Even on a low-cholesterol diet, the individual will synthesize about 0.80 gram of cholesterol per day. The key question is, Is there an excess of cholesterol in the bloodstream? If there is, a diet that reduces the intake of cholesterol might be important. O1.10 AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS AND THEIR DERIVATIVES At the turn of the nineteenth century, one of the signs of living the good life was having gas lines connected to your house, so that you could use gas lanterns to light the house after dark. The gas burned in the lanterns was called coal gas because it was produced by heating coal in the absence of air. The principal component of coal gas was methane, CH4. In 1825, Michael Faraday was asked to analyze an oily liquid with a distinct odor that collected in tanks used to store coal gas at high pressures. Faraday found that the compound had the empirical formula CH. Ten years later, Eilhardt Mitscherlich produced the same material by heating benzoic acid with lime. Mitscherlich named the substance benzin, which became benzene when translated into English. He also determined that the molecular formula of the compound was C6H6. Benzene must be an unsaturated hydrocarbon because it has far less hydrogen than the equivalent saturated hydrocarbon: C6H14. But benzene is too stable to be an alkene or alkyne. Alkenes and alkynes rapidly add Br2 to their CPC and CqC bonds, whereas benzene reacts with bromine only in the presence of a catalyst, FeBr3. Furthermore, when benzene reacts with Br2 in the presence of FeBr3, the product of the reaction is a compound in which a bromine atom has been substituted for a hydrogen atom, not added to the compound the way an alkene adds bromine. FeBr3 C6H6 Br2 8888n C6H5Br HBr Other compounds were eventually isolated from coal that had similar properties. Their formulas suggested the presence of multiple CPC bonds, but the compounds were not reactive enough to be alkenes. Because they often had a distinct odor, or aroma, they became known as aromatic compounds. The structure of benzene was a recurring problem throughout most of the nineteenth century. The first step toward solving the problem was taken by Friedrich August Kekulé in 1865. (Kekulé’s interest in the structure of organic compounds may have resulted from the fact that he first enrolled at the University of Giessen as a student of architecture.) One day, while dozing before a fire, Kekulé dreamed of long rows of atoms twisting in a snakelike motion until one of the snakes seized hold of its own tail. This dream led Kekulé to propose that benzene consists of a ring of six carbon atoms with alternating COC single bonds and CPC double bonds. Because there are two ways in which the bonds can alternate, Kekulé proposed that benzene was a mixture of two compounds in equilibrium. H H H H H H H H H H H H Kekulé’s explanation of the structure of benzene 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:59 Page 23 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 23 Kekulé’s structure explained the formula of benzene, but it did not explain why benzene failed to behave like an alkene. The unusual stability of benzene wasn’t understood until the development of the theory of resonance. This theory states that molecules for which two or more satisfactory Lewis structures can be drawn are an average, or hybrid, of the structures. Benzene, for example, is a resonance hybrid of the two Kekulé structures. H H H H H H H H H H H H The resonance structures for benzene The difference between the equilibrium and resonance descriptions of benzene is subtle, but important. In the equilibrium approach, a pair of arrows is used to describe a reversible reaction, in which the molecule on the left is converted into the one on the right, and vice versa. In the resonance approach, a double-headed arrow is used to suggest that a benzene molecule does not shift back and forth between two different structures; it is a hybrid mixture of the structures. One way to probe the difference between Kekulé’s idea of an equilibrium between two structures and the resonance theory in which benzene is a hybrid mixture of the structures would be to study the lengths of the carbon–carbon bonds in benzene. If Kekulé’s idea was correct, we would expect to find a molecule in which the bonds alternate between relatively long COC single bonds (0.154 nm) and significantly shorter CPC double bonds (0.133 nm). When benzene is cooled until it crystallizes, and the structure of the molecule is studied by X-ray diffraction, we find that the six carbon–carbon bonds in the molecule are the same length (0.1395 nm). The crystal structure of benzene is therefore more consistent with the resonance model of bonding in benzene than the original Kekulé structures. The resonance theory does more than explain the structure of benzene—it also explains why benzene is less reactive than an alkene. The resonance theory assumes that molecules that are hybrids of two or more Lewis structures are more stable than those that aren’t. It is the extra stability that makes benzene and other aromatic derivatives less reactive than normal alkenes. To emphasize the difference between benzene and a simple alkene, many chemists replace the Kekulé structures for benzene and its derivatives with an aromatic ring in which the circle in the center of the ring indicates that the electrons in the ring are delocalized; they are free to move around the ring. H H H H H H It is the delocalization of electrons around the aromatic ring that makes benzene less reactive than a simple alkene. Aromatic compounds were being extracted from coal tar as early as the 1830s. As a result, many of the compounds were given common names that are still in use today. A 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 24 24 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS few of these compounds are shown below. CH3 OH OCH3 Phenol Toluene CO2H NH2 Anisole Aniline Benzoic acid There are three ways in which a pair of substituents can be placed on an aromatic ring. In the ortho (o) isomer, the substituents are in adjacent positions on the ring. In the meta (m) isomer, they are separated by one carbon atom. In the para (p) isomer, they are on opposite ends of the ring. The three isomers of dimethylbenzene, or xylene, are shown below. CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 Ortho Meta CH3 Para Exercise O1.8 Predict the structure of para-dichlorobenzene, one of the active ingredients in mothballs. Solution Para isomers of benzene contain two substituents at opposite positions in the sixmembered ring. para-Dichlorobenzene therefore has the following structure. Cl Cl p-Dichlorobenzene Aromatic compounds can contain more than one six-membered ring. Naphthalene, anthracene, and phenanthrene are examples of aromatic compounds that contain two or more fused benzene rings. H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H Naphthalene (C10H8) H H H H H Anthracene (C14H10) H H H H H H Phenanthrene (C14H10) A ball-and-stick model of anthracene is shown in Figure O1.18. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 25 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 25 FIGURE O1.18 Anthracene. O1.11 THE CHEMISTRY OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS The term petroleum comes from the Latin stems petra, “rock,” and oleum, “oil.” It is used to describe a broad range of hydrocarbons that are found as gases, liquids, or solids beneath the surface of the earth. The two most common forms are natural gas and crude oil. Natural gas is a mixture of lightweight alkanes. A typical sample of natural gas when it is collected at its source contains 80% methane (CH4), 7% ethane (C2H6), 6% propane (C3H8), 4% butane and isobutane (C4H10), and 3% pentanes (C5H12). The C3, C4, and C5 hydrocarbons are removed before the gas is sold. The commercial natural gas delivered to the customer is therefore primarily a mixture of methane and ethane. The propane and butanes removed from natural gas are usually liquefied under pressure and sold as liquefied petroleum gases (LPG). Natural gas was known in England as early as 1659. But it didn’t replace coal gas as an important source of energy in the United States until after World War II, when a network of gas pipelines was constructed. By 1980, annual consumption of natural gas had grown to more than 55,000 billion cubic feet, which represented almost 30% of total U.S. energy consumption. The first oil well was drilled by Edwin Drake in 1859, in Titusville, PA. It produced up to 800 gallons per day, which far exceeded the demand for the material. By 1980, consumption of oil had reached 2.5 billion gallons per day. About 225 billion barrels of oil were produced by the petroleum industry between 1859 and 1970. Another 200 billion barrels were produced between 1970 and 1980. The total proven world reserves of crude oil in 1970 were estimated at 546 billion barrels, with perhaps another 800 to 900 billion barrels of oil that remained to be found. It took 500 million years for the petroleum beneath the earth’s crust to accumulate. At the present rate of consumption, we might exhaust the world’s supply of petroleum by the 200th anniversary of the first oil well. Crude oil is a complex mixture that is between 50 and 95% hydrocarbon by weight. The first step in refining crude oil involves separating the oil into different hydrocarbon fractions by distillation. A typical set of petroleum fractions is given in Table O1.3. Since there are a number of factors that influence the boiling point of a hydrocarbon, these petroleum fractions are complex mixtures. More than 500 different hydrocarbons have been identified in the gasoline fraction, for example. About 10% of the product of the distillation of crude oil is a fraction known as straightrun gasoline, which served as a satisfactory fuel during the early days of the internal combustion engine. As the automobile engine developed, it was made more powerful by increasing the compression ratio.2 Straight-run gasoline burns unevenly in high-compression engines, producing a shock wave that causes the engine to “knock,” or “ping.” As the petroleum industry matured, it faced two problems: increasing the yield of gasoline from each barrel of crude oil and decreasing the tendency of gasoline to knock when it burned. 2 Modern cars run at compression ratios of about 91, which means the gasoline–air mixture in the cylinder is compressed by a factor of nine before it is ignited. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 26 26 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS TABLE O1.3 Petroleum Fractions Fraction Boiling Range ( oC) Number of Carbon Atoms Natural gas Petroleum ether Gasoline Kerosene Fuel oils Lubricants Asphalt or coke 20 20–60 40–200 150–260 260 400 Residue C1 to C4 C5 to C6 C5 to C12, but mostly C6 to C8 Mostly C12 to C13 C14 and higher C20 and above Polycyclic The relationship between knocking and the structure of the hydrocarbons in gasoline is summarized in the following general rules. • • • • Branched alkanes and cycloalkanes burn more evenly than straight-chain alkanes. Short alkanes (C4H10) burn more evenly than long alkanes (C7H16). Alkenes burn more evenly than alkanes. Aromatic hydrocarbons burn more evenly than cycloalkanes. The most commonly used measure of a gasoline’s ability to burn without knocking is its octane number. Octane numbers compare a gasoline’s tendency to knock against the tendency of a blend of two hydrocarbons—heptane and 2,2,4-trimethylpentane, or isooctane— to knock. Heptane (C7H16) is a long, straight-chain alkane, which burns unevenly and produces a great deal of knocking. Highly branched alkanes such as 2,2,4-trimethylpentane are more resistant to knocking. Gasolines that match a blend of 87% isooctane and 13% heptane are given an octane number of 87. There are three ways of reporting octane numbers. Measurements made at high speed and high temperature are reported as motor octane numbers. Measurements taken under relatively mild engine conditions are known as research octane numbers. The road index octane numbers reported on gasoline pumps are an average of the two. Road index octane numbers for a few pure hydrocarbons are given in Table O1.4. TABLE O1.4 Hydrocarbon Octane Numbers Hydrocarbon Road Index Octane Number Heptane 2-Methylheptane Hexane 2-Methylhexane 1-Heptene Pentane 1-Pentene Butane Cyclohexane 2,2,4-Trimethylpentane (isooctane) Benzene Toluene 0 23 25 44 60 62 84 91 97 100 101 112 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 27 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 27 By 1922 a number of compounds had been discovered that could increase the octane number of gasoline. Adding as little as 6 mL of tetraethyllead (shown in Figure O1.19) to a gallon of gasoline, for example, can increase the octane number by 15 to 20 units. This discovery gave rise to the first “ethyl” gasoline, and it enabled the petroleum industry to produce aviation gasolines with octane numbers greater than 100. CH3 G CH2 CH Pb CH2 D 2 CH3 CH2 G CH3 CH3 D FIGURE O1.19 Structure of the tetraethyllead used to make “leaded” gasoline. Another way to increase the octane number is thermal reforming. At high temperatures (500–600°C) and high pressures (25–50 atm), straight-chain alkanes isomerize to form branched alkanes and cycloalkanes, thereby increasing the octane number of the gasoline. Running the reaction in the presence of hydrogen and a catalyst such as a mixture of silica (SiO2) and alumina (Al2O3) results in catalytic reforming, which can produce a gasoline with even higher octane numbers. Thermal or catalytic reforming and gasoline additives such as tetraethyllead increase the octane number of the straight-run gasoline obtained from the distillation of crude oil, but neither process increases the yield of gasoline from a barrel of oil. The data in Table O1.3 suggest that we could increase the yield of gasoline by “cracking” the hydrocarbons that end up in the kerosene or fuel oil fractions into smaller pieces. Thermal cracking was discovered as early as the 1860s. At high temperatures (500°C) and high pressures (25 atm), long-chain hydrocarbons break into smaller pieces. A saturated C12 hydrocarbon in kerosene, for example, might break into two C6 fragments. Because the total number of carbon and hydrogen atoms remains constant, one of the products of the reaction must contain a CPC double bond. CH3(CH2)10CH3 888n CH3(CH2)4CH3 CH2PCH(CH2)3CH3 The presence of alkenes in thermally cracked gasolines increases the octane number (70) relative to that of straight-run gasoline (60), but it also makes thermally cracked gasoline less stable for long-term storage. Thermal cracking has therefore been replaced by catalytic cracking, which uses catalysts instead of high temperatures and pressures to crack longchain hydrocarbons into smaller fragments for use in gasoline. About 87% of the crude oil refined in 1980 went into the production of fuels such as gasoline, kerosene, and fuel oil. The remainder went for nonfuel uses, such as petroleum solvents, industrial greases and waxes, or starting materials for the synthesis of petrochemicals. Petroleum products are used to produce synthetic fibers such as nylon, Orlon, and Dacron, and other polymers such as polystyrene, polyethylene, and synthetic rubber. They also serve as raw materials in the production of refrigerants, aerosols, antifreeze, detergents, dyes, adhesives, alcohols, explosives, weed killers, insecticides, and insect repellents. The H2 given off when alkanes are converted to alkenes or when cycloalkanes are converted to aromatic hydrocarbons can be used to produce a number of inorganic petrochemicals, such as ammonia, ammonium nitrate, and nitric acid. As a result, most fertilizers as well as other agricultural chemicals are also petrochemicals. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 28 28 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS O1.12 THE CHEMISTRY OF COAL Coal can be defined as a sedimentary rock that burns. It was formed by the decomposition of plant matter, and it is a complex substance that can be found in many forms. Coal is divided into four classes: anthracite, bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite. Elemental analysis gives empirical formulas such as C137H97O9NS for bituminous coal and C240H90O4NS for high-grade anthracite. A model for one portion of the extended structure for coal is shown in Figure O1.20. H H O S H H H H O H NH2 H H H HOCOH H H H H2 H H HH S HOCOH H H H H S O N H H C f H H H2 fi HO H H O H H O H i C C f i H H H O H S H N i H H H H N H H H H H2 O H H O f O HOCOH H2 H2 H H H2 H H H N H O S H CH3 H HOCOH H S O SO H2 H H HOCOH S H COC H O i H H HOCOH H H O H H H HOCOH H H HH C PO MO H2 H i C H H COC S H2 H HH O H O C H CH2CH3 O H H H C f H H HH f H H O H H H H H H2 FIGURE O1.20 Model for a portion of the extended structure of coal. Anthracite coal is a dense, hard rock with a jet-black color and a metallic luster. It contains between 86% and 98% carbon by weight, and it burns slowly, with a pale blue flame and very little smoke. Bituminous coal, or soft coal, contains between 69% and 86% carbon by weight and is the most abundant form of coal. Subbituminous coal contains less carbon and more water, and it is therefore a less efficient source of heat. Lignite coal, or brown coal, is a very soft coal that contains up to 70% water by weight. The total energy consumption in the United States for 1990 was 86 1015 kJ. Of that total, 41% came from oil, 24% from natural gas, and 23% from coal. Coal is unique as a source of energy in the United States, however, because none of the 2118 billion pounds used in 1990 was imported. Furthermore, the proven reserves are so large we can continue using coal at that level of consumption for at least 2000 years. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 29 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 29 At the time this text was written, coal was the most cost-efficient fuel for heating. The cost of coal delivered to the Purdue University physical plant was $1.41 per million kilojoules of heating energy. The equivalent cost for natural gas would have been $5.22, and #2 fuel oil would have cost $7.34. Although coal is less expensive than natural gas and oil, it is more difficult to handle. As a result, there has been a long history of efforts to turn coal into either a gaseous or a liquid fuel. Coal Gasification As early as 1800, coal gas was made by heating coal in the absence of air. Coal gas is rich in CH4 and gives off up to 20.5 kJ per liter of gas burned. Coal gas—or town gas, as it was also known—became so popular that most major cities and many small towns had a local gas house in which it was generated, and gas burners were adjusted to burn a fuel that produced 20.5 kJ/L. Gas lanterns, of course, were eventually replaced by electric lights. But coal gas was still used for cooking and heating until the more efficient natural gas (38.3 kJ/L) became readily available. A slightly less efficient fuel known as water gas can be made by reacting the carbon in coal with steam. C(s) H2O(g) 88n CO(g) H2(g) Ho 131.3 kJ/molrxn Water gas burns to give CO2 and H2O, releasing roughly 11.2 kJ per liter of gas consumed. Note that the enthalpy of reaction for the preparation of water gas is positive, which means that the reaction is endothermic. As a result, the preparation of water gas typically involves alternating blasts of steam and either air or oxygen through a bed of white-hot coal. The exothermic reactions between coal and oxygen to produce CO and CO2 provide enough energy to drive the reaction between steam and coal. Water gas formed by the reaction of coal with oxygen and steam is a mixture of CO, CO2, and H2. The ratio of H2 to CO can be increased by adding water to the mixture, to take advantage of a reaction known as the water-gas shift reaction. CO(g) H2O(g) 88n CO2(g) H2(g) Ho 41.2 kJ/molrxn The concentration of CO2 can be decreased by reacting the CO2 with coal at high temperatures to form CO. C(s) CO2(g) 88n 2 CO(g) Ho 172.5 kJ/molrxn Water gas from which the CO2 has been removed is called synthesis gas because it can be used as a starting material for a variety of organic and inorganic compounds. It can be used as the source of H2 for the synthesis of ammonia, for example. N2(g) 3 H2(g) 88n 2 NH3(g) It can also be used to make methyl alcohol, or methanol. CO(g) 2 H2(g) 88n CH3OH(l) Methanol can then be used as a starting material for the synthesis of alkenes, aromatic compounds, acetic acid, formaldehyde, and ethyl alcohol (ethanol). Synthesis gas can also be used to produce methane, or synthetic natural gas (SNG). 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 30 30 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS CO(g) 3 H2(g) 88n CH4(g) H2O(g) 2 CO(g) 2 H2(g) 88n CH4(g) CO2(g) Coal Liquefaction The first step toward making liquid fuels from coal involves the manufacture of synthesis gas (CO and H2) from coal. In 1925, Franz Fischer and Hans Tropsch developed a catalyst that converted CO and H2 at 1 atm and 250–300°C into liquid hydrocarbons. By 1941, Fischer–Tropsch plants produced 740,000 tons of petroleum products per year in Germany. Fischer–Tropsch technology is based on a complex series of reactions that use H2 to reduce CO to CH2 groups linked to form long-chain hydrocarbons. CO(g) 2 H2(g) 88n (CH2)n(l) H2O(g) Ho 165 kJ/molrxn The water produced in the reaction combines with CO in the water-gas shift reaction to form H2 and CO2. CO(g) H2O(g) 88n CO2(g) H2(g) Ho 41.2 kJ/molrxn The overall Fischer–Tropsch reaction is therefore described by the following equation. 2 CO(g) H2(g) 88n (CH2)n(l) CO2(g) Ho 206 kJ/molrxn At the end of World War II, Fischer–Tropsch technology was under study in most industrial nations. The low cost and high availability of crude oil, however, led to a decline in interest in liquid fuels made from coal. The only commercial plants using this technology today are in the Sasol complex in South Africa, which uses 30.3 million tons of coal per year. Another approach to liquid fuels is based on the reaction between CO and H2 to form methanol, CH3OH. CO(g) 2 H2(g) 88n CH3OH(l) Methanol can be used directly as a fuel, or it can be converted into gasoline with catalysts such as the ZSM-5 zeolite catalyst developed by Mobil Oil Company. As the supply of petroleum becomes smaller and its cost continues to rise, a gradual shift may be observed toward liquid fuels made from coal. Whether this takes the form of a return to a modified Fischer–Tropsch technology, the conversion of methanol to gasoline, or other alternatives, only time will tell. O1.13 CHIRAL STEREOISOMERS The cis/trans isomers formed by alkenes aren’t the only example of stereoisomers. To understand the second example of stereoisomers, it might be useful to start by considering a pair of hands. For all practical purposes, they contain the same “substituents”—four fingers and one thumb on each hand. If you clap them together, you will find even more similarities between the two hands. The thumbs are attached at about the same point on the hand, significantly below the point where the fingers start. The second fingers on both hands are usually the longest, then the third fingers, then the first fingers, and finally the “little” fingers. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 31 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 31 In spite of the many similarities, there is a fundamental difference between a pair of hands that can be observed by trying to place your right hand into a left-hand glove. Your hands have two important properties: (1) each hand is the mirror image of the other, and (2) the mirror images are not superimposable. The mirror image of the left hand looks like the right hand, and vice versa, as shown in Figure O1.21. FIGURE O1.21 Each hand is the mirror image of the other, but neither hand is superimposable on the other. Objects that possess a similar handedness are said to be chiral (literally, “handed”). Those that do not are said to be achiral. Gloves are chiral. (It is difficult, if not impossible, to place a right-hand glove on your left hand or a left-hand glove on your right hand.) Mittens, however, are often achiral. (Either mitten can fit on either hand.) Feet and shoes are both chiral, but socks are not. In 1874 Jacobus van’t Hoff and Joseph Le Bel recognized that a compound that contains a single tetrahedral carbon atom with four different substituents could exist in two forms that were mirror images of each other. Consider the CHFClBr molecule, for example, which contains four different substituents on a tetrahedral carbon atom. Figure O1.22 shows one possible arrangement of the substituents and the mirror image of the structure. By convention, solid lines are used to represent bonds that lie in the plane of the paper. Wedges are used for bonds that come out of the plane of the paper toward the viewer; dashed lines describe bonds that go behind the paper. ≥ H A C Br ( E F Cl ≥ H A C E ( Br F Cl FIGURE O1.22 One form of the CHFClBr molecule and its mirror image. If we rotate the molecule on the right by 180° around the COH bond we get the structures shown in Figure O1.23. Chiral molecules are said to be optically active because they are capable of rotating a plane of polarized light. H A C E ( Cl F Br ≥ ≥ H A C E ( Br F Cl FIGURE O1.23 To predict whether a molecule is optically active, we have to decide whether the molecule and its mirror image can be superimposed. We can start by rotating the mirror image by 180° around the C—H bond. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 32 32 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS These structures are different because they cannot be superimposed on one another, as shown in Figure O1.24. ≥ ≥ H HA AC EC Cl FE Br F Br Cl FIGURE O1.24 The compound CHFClBr is chiral because the structures are not superimposable. CHFClBr is therefore a chiral molecule that exists in the form of a pair of stereoisomers that are mirror images of each other. As a rule, any tetrahedral atom that carries four different substituents is a stereocenter, or a stereogenic atom. Compounds that contain a single stereocenter are always chiral. Some compounds that contain two or more stereocenters are achiral because of the symmetry of the relationship between the stereocenters. The prefix “en-” often means “to make, or cause to be,” as in “endanger.” It is also used to strengthen a term, to make it even more forceful, as in “enliven.” Thus, it isn’t surprising that a pair of stereoisomers that are mirror images of each other are called enantiomers. They are literally compounds that contain parts that are forced to be across from each other. Stereoisomers that aren’t mirror images of each other are called diastereomers.3 The cis/trans isomers of 2-butene, for example, are stereoisomers, but they are not mirror images of each other. As a result, they are diastereomers. Exercise O1.9 Which of the following compounds would form enantiomers because the molecule is chiral? CH3 A CH3O COCH2CH3 A Br CH3 A BrCH2OC OCH2CH3 A H 2-Bromo-2-methylbutane 1-Bromo-2-methylbutane Solution The second carbon atom in 2-bromo-2-methylbutane contains two identical CH3 substituents. As a result, the compound is achiral and does not form enantiomers. CH2CH3 A C E ( ¨ CH3 Br CH3 3 2-Bromo-2-methylbutane The prefix “dia-” is often used to indicate “opposite directions,” or “across,” as in “diagonal.” 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 33 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 33 The second carbon atom in 1-bromo-2-methylbutane carries four different substituents: H, BrCH2, CH3, and CH2CH3. As a result, the molecule is chiral and it forms enantiomers. CH2CH3 A EC ( ¨ CH3 BrCH2 H and CH2CH3 A EC ( ¨ H BrCH2 CH3 Enantiomers of 1-bromo-2-methylbutane Note: Every object—with the possible exception of the vampires found on late-night TV— has a mirror image. The relevant question is whether the mirror image can be superimposed on the source of the image. If it can, the object is not chiral (achiral). If it cannot, the object is chiral and it can exist as a pair of stereoisomers. O1.14 OPTICAL ACTIVITY The Difference between Enantiomers on the Macroscopic Scale If you could analyze the light that travels toward you from a lamp, you would find the electric and magnetic components of the radiation oscillating in all of the planes parallel to the path of the light. However, if you analyzed light that has passed through a polarizer, such as a Nicol prism or the lens of polarized sunglasses, you would find that the oscillations were now confined to a single plane. In 1813 Jean Baptiste Biot noticed that plane-polarized light was rotated either to the right or the left when it passed through single crystals of quartz or aqueous solutions of tartaric acid or sugar. Because they interact with light, substances that can rotate planepolarized light are said to be optically active. Those that rotate the plane clockwise (to the right) are said to be dextrorotatory (from the Latin word dexter, “right”).4 Those that rotate the plane counterclockwise (to the left) are called levorotatory (from the Latin word laevus, “left”). In 1848 Louis Pasteur noted that sodium ammonium tartrate forms two different kinds of crystals that are mirror images of each other, much as the right hand is a mirror image of the left hand. By separating one type of crystal from the other with a pair of tweezers he was able to prepare two samples of the compound. One was dextrorotatory when dissolved in aqueous solution; the other was levorotatory. Since the optical activity remained after the compound had been dissolved in water, it could not be the result of macroscopic properties of the crystals. Pasteur therefore concluded that there must be some asymmetry in the structure of the compound that allowed it to exist in two forms. Once techniques were developed to determine the three-dimensional structure of a molecule, the source of the optical activity of a substance was recognized: Compounds that are optically active contain molecules that are chiral. Chirality is a property of a molecule that results from its structure. Optical activity is a macroscopic property of a collection of the molecules that arises from the way they interact with light. Compounds, such as CHFClBr, that contain a single stereocenter are the simplest to understand. One enantiomer of the chiral compound is dextrorotatory; the other is levorotatory. To decide whether a compound should be optically active, we look for evidence that the molecules are chiral. 4 You might remember that “dextro” means right by noting that the predominantly right-handed world in which we live uses words such as dextrous to mean unusually skilled at the use of one’s hands—in particular, the “right” hand. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 34 34 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS The instrument with which optically active compounds are studied is a polarimeter, shown in Figure O1.25. Imagine a horizontal line that passes through the zero of a coordinate system. By convention, negative numbers are placed on the left and positive numbers on the right of zero. Thus levorotatory compounds are indicated with a negative sign () and dextrorotatory compounds with a positive sign (). Emergent light with rotated plane of polarization Nicol prism polarizer Unpolarized light α Nicol prism analyzer Incident plane-polarized light Polarimeter tube containing solution of an optical isomer FIGURE O1.25 A polarimeter for studying the rotation of plane-polarized light. The magnitude of the angle through which an enantiomer rotates plane-polarized light depends on four quantities: (1) the wavelength of the light, (2) the length of the cell through which the light passes, (3) the concentration of the optically active compound in the solution through which the light passes, and (4) the specific rotation of the compound, which reflects the relative ability of the compound to rotate plane-polarized light. The specific rotation of the dextrorotatory isomer of glucose is written as follows: [] 20 D 3.12 When the spectrum of sunlight was first analyzed by Joseph von Fraunhofer in 1814, he observed a limited number of dark bands in the spectrum, which he labeled A–H. We now know that the D band in the spectrum is the result of the absorption by sodium atoms of light that has a wavelength of 589.6 nm. The “D” in the symbol for specific rotation indicates that it is light of this wavelength that was studied. The “20” indicates that the experiment was done at 20°C. The “” sign indicates that the compound is dextrorotatory; it rotates light clockwise. Finally, the magnitude of the measurement indicates that when a solution of the compound with a concentration of 1.00 g/mL was studied in a 10-cm cell, it rotated the light by 3.12°. The magnitude of the rotations observed for a pair of enantiomers is always the same. The only difference between the compounds is the direction in which they rotate planepolarized light. The specific rotation of the levorotatory isomer of the compound would therefore be 3.12°. The Difference between Enantiomers on the Molecular Scale An unambiguous system for differentiating between enantiomers is based on the Latin terms for left (sinister) and right (rectus). • Arrange the four substituents in order of decreasing atomic number of the atoms attached to the stereocenter. (The substituent with the highest atomic number gets 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 35 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 35 the highest priority.) The substituents in 2-bromobutane, for example, would be listed in the order: Br CH3 CH2CH3 H. 1st priority Br A CH3OCOCH2CH3 A H 2nd priority 2nd priority 3rd priority • When two or more substituents have the same priority—such as the CH3 and CH2CH3 groups in 2-bromobutane—continue working down the substituent chain until you find a difference. In 2-bromobutane, we would give the CH2CH3 group a higher priority than the CH3 group because the next point down the chain is a CH3 group in the CH2CH3 substituent and an H atom in the CH3 group. Thus, the four substituents on 2-bromobutane would be listed in the order: Br CH2CH3 CH3 H. 1st priority Br A CH3OCO CH2CH3 A H 3rd priority 2nd priority 4th priority • View the enantiomer from the direction that places the substituent with the lowest priority as far from the eye as possible. In the following example, this involves rotating the molecule counterclockwise around the C—CH2CH3 bond and tilting it slightly around an axis that lies in the plane of the paper. When this is done, the substituent that has the lowest priority is hidden from the eye. CH2CH3 A C E ( ¨ H CH3 Br • CH2CH3 % C ; ' CH3 Br Trace a path that links the substituents in decreasing order of priority. If the path curves to the right—clockwise—the molecule is the rectus or R enantiomer. If it curves to the left—counterclockwise—it is the sinister or S enantiomer. 2nd priority CH2CH3 % C ; ' CH3 Br 3rd priority 1st priority (S)-2-Bromobutane 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 36 36 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS In this example, the path curves to the left, so the enantiomer is the (S)-2-bromobutane stereoisomer. It is important to recognize that the (R)/(S) system is based on the structure of an individual molecule and the ()/() system is based on the macroscopic behavior of a large collection of molecules. The most complete description of an enantiomer combines aspects of both systems. The enantiomer analyzed in this section is best described as (S)-()-2bromobutane. It is the (S) enantiomer because of its structure and the () enantiomer because samples of the enantiomer with this structure are levorotatory; they rotate planepolarized light clockwise. KEY TERMS Achiral Addition reaction Alkane Alkene Alkyl bromide Alkyl chloride Alkyl halide Alkyne Branched hydrocarbon Catalytic cracking Catalytic reforming Chiral Cis/trans isomer Coal Coal gas Conformation Constitutional isomer Crude oil Cycloalkane Dextrorotatory Diastereomer Enantiomer Essential oil Hydrocarbon Isomer Levorotatory Markovnikov’s rule Natural gas Newman projection Octane number Optical activity Organic chemistry Specific rotation Stereocenter Stereogenic atom Steroid Stereoisomer Straight-chain hydrocarbon Straight-run gasoline Synthesis gas Terpene Terpenoid Tetravalent Thermal cracking Thermal reforming Town gas Unsaturated hydrocarbon Vital force Water gas Water-gas shift reaction PROBLEMS The Special Role of Carbon 1. Explain why carbon forms covalent bonds, not ionic bonds, with so many other elements. 2. Carbon forms relatively strong double bonds, not only with itself, but with other nonmetals such as nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur. Why is this important in terms of the great diversity of carbon compounds? 3. In The Life Puzzle, Graham Cairns-Smith proposed three rules for speculating on the origin of life: (1) take a good look at atoms and see what they can do, (2) take a good look at organisms and see how they work, and then (3) put an organism together in the easiest way you can think of. He reports two hypotheses to explain the striking fundamental biochemical similarity between life in all its forms. That “the first organisms on Earth had a similar composition to modern forms.” Or that “modern biochemical 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:59 Page 37 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 37 uniformity is a product of evolution—a tribute to the effectiveness of natural selection—rather than an indication that life depends uniquely on amino acids, purines and so on.” Speculate on a few of the relative merits of these hypotheses, or propose an alternative hypothesis. The Saturated Hydrocarbons: Alkanes and Cycloalkanes 4. Use examples to explain the difference between saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons and between straight-chain and branched hydrocarbons. 5. Explain why it is better to describe butane as a “straight-chain hydrocarbon” than it is to describe it as a “linear hydrocarbon.” 6. Use the fact that straight-chain alkanes have a CH3 group at either end and a chain of CH2 groups down the middle to explain why alkanes have the generic formula CnH2n2. Write the generic formulas for cycloalkanes, alkenes, and alkynes. 7. Describe the difference between n-pentane, isopentane, and neopentane. Classify the compounds as either stereoisomers or constitutional isomers. 8. Predict the number of constitutional isomers of heptane, C7H16. 9. Write the molecular formula for the saturated hydrocarbon that has the following carbon skeleton and name the compound. C OCOCOC OC A A C C A C 10. Write the molecular formula for the saturated hydrocarbon that has the following carbon skeleton and name the compound. C OC C OC OC A A CO C O C O C O C A C OC 11. Explain why it is possible to isolate different constitutional isomers of butane, but not different conformations of butane. 12. Two of the conformations of butane can be described by the following diagrams, known as Newman projections, which look down the C2—C3 bond in butane. Which of these conformations is more favorable? H H CH3 CH3 H H H H A CH3 H H CH3 B 13. Provide the systematic (IUPAC approved) name for the following compound. CH3 A CH3CH2CHCHCH2CHCH3 A A CH3 CH2CH3 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 38 38 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 14. Write the formula for the compound known as 1-methyl-1-chlorocyclopentane. 15. Draw the structure of 2,3,4-trimethyl-4-ethyloctane. 16. Provide the systematic for the compound in the following Newman projection. CH2CH3 Br Br H H CH3 17. One way to decide whether a pair of structures represent different compounds is to assign a systematic name to each structure. Use this approach to decide whether the following are isomers or different descriptions of the same compound. CH3 G CHOCH2 D i CH3 CHOCH3 f CH3 CH3 CH3 A A CH3CHCH2CHCH3 The Unsaturated Hydrocarbons: Alkenes and Alkynes 18. Draw the structures of all the alkenes that have the formula C6H12 and name the compounds. 19. Draw the structures of all the alkynes that have the formula C5H8 and name the compounds. 20. Explain why it is a mistake to name a compound 3-pentene. What would be the correct name of the compound? 21. Use the VSED theory to predict the shape of the tetrafluoroethylene (C2F4) molecule that is the starting material used to make Teflon. 22. Explain why alkenes can form both constitutional isomers and stereoisomers. What characteristic feature of a pair of alkenes can be used to decide whether they are constitutional isomers or stereoisomers? 23. Explain why alkynes can have constitutional isomers but not stereoisomers. 24. Describe the hybridization of each of the carbon atoms in the following compound. CH3CHPCHCH2CqCH 25. Which of the following compounds does not have the same molecular formula as the others? (a) cyclopentane (b) methylcyclobutane (c) 1-pentene (d) pentane (e) 1,1-dimethylcyclopropane 26. Which of the following compounds have cis/trans isomers? (a) CHCl3 (b) F2CPCF2 (c) Cl2CPCHCH3 (d) FClCPCFCl (e) H2CPCHF 27. Which of the following compounds have cis/trans isomers? (a) 1-pentene (b) 2-pentene (c) 2-methyl-2-butene (d) 1-chloro-2-butene (e) 2-pentyne 28. Which of the following pairs of compounds would be constitutional isomers? 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 19:24 Page 39 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 39 (a) CH3CH2OCH2CH3 and CH3CH2CH2CH2OH (b) (CH3)2CHCH3 and CH3CH2CH2CH3 CH3 A (c) CH3CH2CH2CH3 and CH2CH2 A CH3 Cl Cl Cl H (d) and H H H Cl 29. Determine whether the following compounds are isomers. Explain why or why not. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. Draw the structure for cis-2,3-dichloro-2-hexene. Draw the structure for 2,6-dimethyl-3-heptyne. Draw the structure for trans-6-methyl-2-heptene. Draw the structure for cyclohexene. Draw the structure for 2,3-dimethyl-2-pentene. Explain why the compound can’t exist as a pair of cis/trans isomers. The Reactions of Alkanes, Alkenes, and Alkynes 35. Write a balanced equation for the reaction in which isooctane, C8H18, burns in oxygen to form CO2 and H2O vapor. 36. Define the term addition reaction and give an example of an addition reaction of an alkene. 37. Predict the product of the addition reaction between Br2 and 2-pentene. 38. Predict the product of the addition reaction between water and 1-pentene in the presence of sulfuric acid. 39. Predict the product of the addition reaction between excess H2 and 2-pentyne in the presence of a platinum metal catalyst. 40. Which of the following is a product of the reaction between chlorine and ethylene? (a) CH3CHCl2 (b) CH3CH2Cl (c) ClCH2CH2Cl (d) Cl2CHCHCl2 41. Which of the following does not rapidly react with Br2 dissolved in CCl4? (a) pentane (b) 1-pentene (c) 2-pentene (d) 1-pentyne (e) 2-pentyne 42. Assume that HI adds to a CPC double bond according to Markovnikov’s rule. Draw the structure and name the product of the reaction between hydrogen iodide and 2-methyl-2-pentene. 43. Initial attempts to confirm Markovnikov’s rule for the addition of HBr to an alkene were complicated by the fact that the reactions did not always give the same product. We now know that HBr adds to a CPC double according to Markovnikov’s rule unless the solvent is contaminated with a source of free radicals. Draw the structures and name the products of both the Markovnikov addition of HBr to 1-pentene and the anti-Markovnikov addition of HBr that occurs in the presence of a free radical contaminant. 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 40 40 THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS The Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Their Derivatives 44. Draw the structures of the following aromatic compounds: aniline, anisole, benzene, and benzoic acid. 45. Draw the structures of ortho-, meta-, and para-bromotoluene. 46. TNT is an abbreviation for 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene. Toluene is a derivative of benzene in which a methyl (CH3) group is substituted for one of the hydrogen atoms. Trinitrotoluene is a derivative of toluene in which NO2 groups have replaced three more hydrogen atoms on the benzene ring. Draw the structures of all the possible isomers of trinitrotoluene. Label the isomer that is 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene. 47. On an exam, a student described benzene as a mixture of two structures that are rapidly being converted from one to the other. What is wrong with that answer? 48. Explain why the 12 atoms in a benzene molecule all lie in the same plane. The Chemistry of Petroleum Products and Coal 49. Explain why a mixture of CO and H2 can be used as a fuel. What are the products of the combustion of the mixture, which was once known as “water gas.” 50. Natural gas, petroleum ether, gasoline, kerosene, and asphalt are all different forms of hydrocarbons that give off energy when burned. Describe how the substances differ. What happens to the boiling points of the mixtures as the average length of the hydrocarbon chain increases? 51. Which of the following compounds has the largest octane number? (a) n-butane (b) n-pentane (c) n-hexane (d) n-octane 52. Which of the following won’t increase the octane number of gasoline? (a) increasing the concentration of branched-chain alkanes (b) increasing the concentration of cycloalkanes (c) increasing the concentration of aromatic hydrocarbons (d) increasing the average length of the hydrocarbon chains. 53. Describe how thermal cracking and catalytic cracking increase the amount of highoctane gasoline that can be obtained from a barrel of oil. Explain why neither thermal reforming nor catalytic reforming can achieve this. 54. Coal gas can be obtained when coal is heated in the absence of air. Water gas can be obtained when coal reacts with steam. Describe the difference between the gases and explain why much more water gas can be extracted from a ton of coal. Optical Activity 55. Describe the difference between constitutional isomers and stereoisomers. What characteristic feature of a molecule could be used to distinguish between the two forms of isomers? 56. Objects that cannot be superimposed on their mirror images are said to be chiral, and chiral molecules are optically active. Which of the following molecules are optically active? (a) CH4 (b) CH3Cl (c) CHCl3 (d) CHFCl2 (e) CHFClBr 57. Which of the following compounds are optically active? CH3 A (a) C2H4 (b) C6H6 (c) C6H4Cl2 (d) CH3CH2CHCH3 58. Coniine is the active ingredient in the poison known as hemlock that was given to EQA 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 41 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 41 Socrates in 399 B.C. Use the following diagram of the structure of coniine to predict whether the compound is optically active. N A H 59. Use the structure of caffeine shown below to predict whether the compound is optically active. CH3 O CH3 N O N N N CH3 60. Determine the number of centers of chirality in the structure of vitamin C shown in Figure O1.2. 61. Predict whether the following compound is chiral. CH2CH2CH2CH3 A CH3ONOCH2CH3 A CH(CH3)2 62. Which of the following compounds, which play an important role in the chemistry of biological systems, is chiral? CO2H A CH2 A HOOCOCO2H A CH2 A CO2H Citric acid CO2H A CH2 A HOCOCO2H A HOOCH A CO2H CO2H A CH2 A CH2 A HOOCOCO2H A CH2 A CO2H Isocitric acid Homocitric acid 63. Which (if any) of the carbon atoms in 2-bromo-3-methylbutane are stereocenters? 64. Determine whether the following isomers are enantiomers or diastereomers. What characteristic feature of the molecule can be used to make the decision? CH2CH3 A C D ( CH3 H Br CH2CH3 A C D ( Br H CH3 1012T_mod04_1-42 1/20/05 16:13 Page 42 42 EQA THE STRUCTURE OF HYDROCARBONS 65. Determine whether the following isomers are enantiomers or diastereomers. What characteristic feature of the molecule can be used to make the decision? 66. Determine whether the following compound is the R or S enantiomer of 2-bromobutane. CH2CH3 A C D ( Br CH3 H