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Chapter 3 Hydrocarbons: Nomenclature and Reactions Chapter 3 Problems • Review Section 3.9 • Read Essays on petroleum (p 204-207) and gasoline (p 221-223) for interest. • I recommend that you do all problems except Prob. 8, 14, 33, 34 and 41 • Skip ethenyl, 2-propenyl etc on p. 200 • Read Section 3.15 and 3-16, but don’t take them too seriously. Sect. 3.1: IUPAC nomenclature systematic nomenclature I nternational U nion of P ure and A pplied C hemistry colloquially: “eye-you-pac” Sect. 3.2: the alkanes • Hydrocarbons • “Paraffins” • Alkanes: formula CnH2n+2 The alkanes: table 3-2 CH4 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 Methane (CH4) CH3 CH3 Ethane (C2H6) (C3H8) (C4H10) CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 Pentane Heptane (C7H16) CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH3 Butane (C6H14) CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 CH3 CH2 CH3 Propane Hexane (C5H12) Octane (C8H18) CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 Nonane (C9H20) CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 Decane (C10H22) Sect. 3.4: IUPAC nomenclature of alkanes Single substituent group 1. Find the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms and name it (use linear names). 2. Number the chain starting from the end nearest a branch. 3. Give the substituent a name based on the number of carbon atoms it has. replace the -ane ending with -yl 4. Give the substituent a number determined on its location on the chain. 5. Assemble the name. Finding the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms is not always simple all possibilites must be examined C-C C-C-C-C-C-C-C-C-C C it won’t always be the horizontal one as shown here 9 try these also …….. C-C C-C C- C-C-C-C-C-C-C-C C 6 C-C-C- C-C-C-C-C-C C 8 Sect. 3.3: Common alkyl groups (C1 through C4): table 3-3 CH3 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 Methyl CH3 CH CH2 Butyl CH3 Isobutyl CH3 CH2 (2-Methylpropyl) Ethyl CH3 CH2 CH2 Propyl CH3 CH CH3 Isopropyl (1-Methylethyl) CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH3 CH3 C CH3 sec-Butyl tert-Butyl (1-Methylpropyl) (1,1-Dimethylethyl) Name this alkane 4 3 2 1 CH3 CH2 CH CH3 CH3 2-methylbutane Find the longest continuous carbon chain 1 2 3 CH3 CH2 CH CH3 CH2 CH3 4 3-methylpentane 5 You must choose the longest continuous carbon chain 4 3 2 1 CH3 CH2 CH CH2 CH2 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH3 5 6 7 4-ethylheptane Two different substituents • number chain from end closest to a group, regardless of alphabetical order • locate where groups are on chain with numbers • place groups in alphabetical order, with the appropriate number • assemble the complete name, using hyphens to separate numbers from “text” Number from the end nearest the first substituent CH2 CH3 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH3 7 6 5 4 3 2 CH3 4-ethyl-3-methylheptane 1 Number from the end nearest the first substituent CH3 CH3 CH2 CH2 CH CH2 CH CH2 CH3 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 CH2 CH3 3-ethyl-5-methyloctane 1 Two or more identical substituent groups • for two identical groups, use prefix di with the name of the group: dimethyl, diethyl, etc. • dimethyl alphabetized as methyl, not dimethyl • use numbers to locate groups on chain • use commas to separate numbers • prefixes: di = 2 tri = 3 tetra = 4 penta = 5 Use “di-” with two substituents CH3 CH3 CH CH CH3 1 2 3 4 CH3 2,3-dimethylbutane Every substituent must get a number CH3 CH3 CH2 C 1 2 3 CH2 CH2 CH3 4 5 CH3 3,3-dimethylhexane 6 You need numbers, even though it appears on the same carbon! CH3 CH3 CH3 CH CH2 C 5 4 3 2 CH3 1 CH3 2,2,4-trimethylpentane Number from the end nearest first substituent CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH CH3 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 CH3 2,7,8-trimethyldecane 2 CH3 1 Number from the end which has the “first difference” CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH CH2 CH3 1 2 3 4 CH3 5 6 7 8 CH3 3,4,8-trimethyldecane 9 10 Number from the end nearest the “first difference” Dimethyl alphabetized as methyl, not dimethyl CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH CH2 CH CH2 CH3 1 2 3 CH3 4 5 6 7 CH2 CH3 6-ethyl-3,4-dimethyloctane 8 If you can name this, you can name almost anything! CH3 CH3 CH3 CH CH2 CH CH2 C 1 2 3 4 CH3 CH CH3 5 6 CH3 CH2 7 CH2 CH3 8 9 4-isopropyl-2,6,6-trimethylnonane The isopropyl group can be named as a “complex” substituent CH3 CH3 CH 2 1 1-methylethyl Now, rename the isopropyl group. Notice the alphabetical order! CH3 CH3 CH3 CH CH2 CH CH2 C 1 2 3 4 CH3 CH CH3 5 6 CH3 CH2 7 CH2 CH3 8 9 2,6,6-trimethyl-4-(1-methylethyl)nonane Deciding on alphabetical order for complex groups • Complex groups are alphabetized under the first letter of the name • (1,3-dimethylbutyl) = d • (1,1,2-trimethylpropyl) = t • (1-ethyl-1,2-dimethylbutyl) = e Naming complex substituents -this one is aphabetized under d C H3 CH3 CH3 C H C H2 C H 4 2 3 1 1,3-dimethylbutyl Naming complex substituents CH3 CH2 CH3 CH3 C 1 CH CH2 CH3 2 3 4 2-ethyl-1,1-dimethylbutyl Name this compound! CH3 CH3 CH2 C CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 1 2 3 4 C 5 1 CH2 CH3 2 3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 6 7 8 CH2 CH2 CH3 5-(1-ethyl-1-methylpropyl)-5-propylnonane 9 Name this two ways -- (the complex group) CH3 CH3 C CH3 CH2 CH3 CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 C CH3 CH2 CH2 CH3 CH3 7-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-3-ethyl-7-methyldecane 7-tert-butyl-3-ethyl-7-methyldecane Sect. 3.5: Common names of alkanes • • • • • butane isobutane pentane isopentane neopentane Sect. 3.6: the cycloalkanes • The names of the cycloalkanes always contain the prefix cyclo • Cycloalkanes have the general formula CnH2n Cyclic molecules H H H H C H H CH2 CH2 H H C C H CH2 CH2 H C C H CH2 CH2 H Cyclobutane H H C C H H HH C H H H H C C C C C H CH2 Cyclopentane C H CH2 CH2 CH2 H H H H CH2 C C Cyclopropane H H H CH2 C C H H H CH2 H H CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 Cyclohexane Nomenclature of the substituted cycloalkanes • If there is only one substituent, do not use the “1”. • If there is more than one substituent, you must use all numbers, including “1”! • Number around the ring in a direction to get from the first substituent to the second substituent by the shorter path. • For equivalent degrees of substitution, number in a direction that follows the alphabetical sequence. • A carbon with greater substitution has precedence in numbering. CH3 CH3 1,1-dimethylcyclohexane CH3 CH3 CH3 CH2 4-ethyl-1,1-dimethylcyclohexane Some cycloalkanes 1,3-dimethylcyclopentane CH3 1 2 3 CH3 CH3 CH3 Drawn differently but same name. 1 = 2 3 CH3 CH3 4 3 1 2 1 CH2CH3 1-ethyl-4-methylcyclohexane E before M CH3CH2 3 CH3 2 3-ethyl-1,1-dimethylcyclobutane The more substituted carbon takes precedence even though E comes before M. Two ways of naming this CH3 CH CH3 CH3 1-isopropyl-2-methylcyclohexane 1-methyl-2-(1-methylethyl)cyclohexane Numbering starts at the most highly-substituted carbon Cl CH3 2 CH3 1 3 7 4 5 6 CH3 2-chloro-1,1,6-trimethylcycloheptane Sect. 3.7: cycloalkyl groups cyclopropyl cyclopentyl cyclobutyl cyclohexyl CH3 CH2 C CH2 CH3 CH3 3-cyclobutyl-3-methylpentane Rings with one substitutent H3C CH CH2CH3 (1-methylpropyl)cyclohexane or 2-cyclohexylbutane No locant is needed. With one substituent on a ring , it is automatically on carbon 1. 1-(1-methylpropyl)cyclohexane is overkill, but OK! Another name of a group or or C6H5 Phenyl CH3 CH3 CH2 CH CH CH3 3-methyl-2-phenylpentane Sect. 3.8: Degree of Substitution methylene methyl CH3 R primary (1°) methine R R CH2 R secondary (2°) R R CH R R C R R tertiary (3°) quaternary (4°) Example A hydrocarbon containing carbon atoms with differing degrees of substitution PRIMARY QUATERNARY CH3 TERTIARY CH3 C CH CH2 CH3 CH3 CH3 SECONDARY All of the methyl groups (CH3) are primary. Sect. 3.9 -- review We already did this in Chapter 1 Sect. 3.10 and 3.11: nomenclature of halides and nitro compounds F Cl fluoro NO2 nitro Br chloro I bromo iodo CH 3 CH 2 Br bromoethane (IUPAC) ethyl bromide (common) Br bromocyclopropane CH3 CH3 C Cl CH3 2-chloro-2-methylpropane (IUPAC) tert-butyl chloride (common) CH 3 CH Br CH CH 2 CH 3 CH3 2-bromo-3-methylpentane I iodocyclohexane (IUPAC) cyclohexyl iodide (common) Br Cl 1-bromo-2-chlorocyclohexane CH3 CH CH3 NO2 2-nitropropane Sect. 3.12: Block diagram for nomenclature LOCANT PREFIX N STEM SUFFIX numbers substituents number -ALK(AN)- ending Sect. 3.13: alkene nomenclature • ending is ene • identify the longest chain with the C=C • number from the end closest to the C=C and assign a number - - i.e. 2-pentene • C=C is more important than groups! • now number the attached groups and place them in alphabetical order CH2 CH2 ethene (IUPAC) CH3 CH CH2 propene (IUPAC) ethylene (common) propylene (common) CH3 CH2 CH CH2 1-butene CH3 CH CH CH3 2-butene CH3 C CH CH3 CH3 2-methyl-2-butene CH3 CH3 CH CH2 CH2 CH CH 6-methyl-2-heptene CH3 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH CH 2 CH2 C CH 3 CH 2 CH2 H C CH3 trans-6-methyl-3-propyl-2-octene (Don’t worry about “trans” until Chapter 4) CH3 CH3 4,4-dimethylcyclohexene CH3 2-methyl-1,3-cyclohexadiene CH2 CH3 CH2 CH3 2,5-diethyl-1,3-cyclooctadiene Very important! benzene It is never cyclohexatriene!!! Sect. 3.14: nomenclature of alkynes • similar system used as with alkenes • ending is yne • identify the longest chain with the triple bond • everything else is the same as alkenes H C C H ethyne “acetylene” CH3 CH 2 C 1-butyne CH3 C C H propyne CH CH3 C C 2-butyne CH 3 ALKYNES ( -YNE ) The functional group has precedence in numbering. CH3 C C CH2CH2CH3 2-hexyne CH3 functional group C C CH CH3 CH3 4-methyl-2-pentyne The suffix has precedence over any substituents 4-chloro-4-methyl-2-pentyne CH3 CH3 C C C CH3 Cl CH3 CH3 CH Br C C CH 5-bromo-2-methyl-3-heptyne CH2 CH3 ene vs. yne: which one wins? Number from the end closest to either the double bond or the triple bond, whichever is closest to the end. Compounds are named: en-yne. 8 7 6 CH3-CH2-C 5 4 3 2 1 C-CH2-CH=CH-CH3 2-octen-5-yne optional, but recommended ….. COMPUTER PROGRAM “ORGANIC NOMENCLATURE” Available in Chemistry Computer Lab - CB280 Go to ChemApps Folder : Chem Apps then choose first and then Organic Organic Nomenclature Sect. 3.15: physical properties of hydrocarbons • the longer the straight chain, the higher the boiling point -- van der Waals forces • isomers that are branched have lower boiling points • hydrogen bonding increases boiling points • Dipole-dipole attractions increase b.p. Sect. 3.16: Combustion of alkanes CnH2n+2 + m O2 n CO2 + (2n+2)/2 H2O + HEAT!!! where n = number of carbons Example: 2 C6H14 + 19 O2 12 CO2 + 14 H2O Sect. 3.17: Halogenation of Alkanes chlorination R H + Cl Cl light free-radical substitution reaction R Cl + H examples CH4 + Cl2 CH3CH2CH3 + Cl2 takes place at a refinery or a chemical plant - not easy to do in the lab CH3Cl + HCl CH3CHCH3 + HCl Cl + CH3CH2CH2-Cl Cl The previous examples given assumed monochlorination (one chlorine added) BUT …the reaction can repeat itself COMMON NAMES CH4 + Cl2 CH3Cl + HCl methyl chloride CH3Cl + Cl2 CH2Cl2 + HCl methylene chloride CH2Cl2 + Cl2 CHCl3 + HCl chloroform CHCl3 + Cl2 CCl4 + HCl carbon tetrachloride fully chlorinated product What are the IUPAC names ? The reaction must be initiated It does not occur in the dark. Exposure to ultraviolet light (sunlight) will start the reaction. Heat will also start the reaction. Once reaction starts, it is exothermic and continues almost explosively. The first step is the dissociation of chlorine : hn or D .. .. :Cl : Cl .. .. diatomic molecule .. : 2 . Cl .. chlorine atoms (radicals) Abstraction of hydrogen atom BY A CHLORINE “FREE RADICAL” (ATOM) unpaired electron = “free” radical C..H C. + + .. . Cl : .. .. : H-Cl .. HYDROGEN ABSTRACTION Chlorine takes the hydrogen and one of its electrons Mechanism of chlorination of methane CHAIN REACTION 1. Initiation .. : Cl .. .. Cl : .. light 2 .. : Cl . .. a free radical “dissociation” R E P E A T I N G S T E P S 2. Chain Propagation (first step) + CH3 H .. : Cl . .. H .. Cl : .. + . CH3 methyl radical “hydrogen abstraction” 3. Chain Propagation (second step) . CH3 + .. : Cl .. .. Cl : .. CH3 .. Cl : .. + .. : Cl . .. feeds back into step two 4. Termination Steps .. 2 : Cl . .. CH3. .. : Cl . .. + + . CH 3 . CH 3 “recombinations” .. : Cl .. .. Cl : .. CH3CH3 .. : Cl CH3 .. These steps stop the chain reaction Monochlorination of propane: Does one isomer predominate? CH3CH2CH3 + Cl2 limited amount CH3CHCH3 + CH3CH2CH2-Cl Cl A QUESTION WHAT ARE THE RELATIVE AMOUNTS OF A AND B ? IS IT STATISTICAL ( 2 : 6 ) = (1 : 3 ) ? DOES SOMETHING ELSE CONTROL THE OUTCOME ? B Monochlorination of propane STATISTICAL VERSUS EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS CH3CHCH3 Cl STATISTICAL PREDICTION CH3CH2CH2-Cl A B 25 % 75 % CH3-CH2-CH3 = 6 : 2 or 3:1 ACTUALLY FOUND 50 % Equal amounts 50 % Equal amounts Experimental results show: Secondary hydrogens are energenically more easily removed than primary hydrogens CH3CHCH3 H CH3CH2CH3 Primary H Secondary H more reactive hydrogen Stability of free radicals explains results! H H H3C C CH 3 H3C CH 2 C H secondary radical primary radical More stable and easier to form! Less stable and harder to form Stability of radicals: TERTIARY > SECONDARY > PRIMARY CH 3 H3C C H CH 3 H3C C H CH 3 H3C CH 2 C H tertiary radical secondary radical primary radical Most stable and easiest to form! less stable than tertiary but more stable than primary Least stable and hardest to form Another example: isobutane Which product should form in the largest amount? CH 3 H 3C C CH 2 H H Cl2 CH 3 H 3C There are 9 primary H’s and only 1 tertiary H Statistically you could predict a 9:1 ratio or a 90% yield of 1-chloro-2-methylpropane! Wrong!! C CH 2 H Cl Isobutane gives only 62% of 2-chloro-2-methylpropane! Why? Look at the stability of the intermediate radical. CH 3 H3C Cl CH 3 H-Cl tertiary radical - more stable CH 3 H3C C C CH 2 H H CH 3 Cl H3C C H H H-Cl C H primary radical - less stable The statistical factor predicts a 9:1 ratio (90%) However, the energy factor predicts that the ratio will be less than 90% and turns out to be 62%. CH 3 H3C C CH 3 CH 3 Cl2 H3C tertiary radical CH 3 H3C C H Cl 38% CH 3 Cl2 H H CH 3 Cl H C C H3C C H C H primary radical 62% Cl H H Cl Draw the structure of all of the monochlorinated products. There are 6 total products. The next slide shows the remaining 5 products. Only ONE product is shown here! Cl2 light or heat The two circled methyl groups are equivalent!!!! Cl same as Cl 1-chloro-2-methylhexane Here are 5 more isomeric products that are formed! Cl2 light or heat Cl 2-chloro-2-methylhexane Cl 2-chloro-5-methylhexane Cl 3-chloro-2-methylhexane Cl Cl 1-chloro-5-methylhexane 4-chloro-2-methylhexane Ethylcyclopentane: monochlorination products CH2 CH3 MONOCHLORINATION PRODUCTS CH2 CH2 Cl CH2 CH3 Cl CH CH3 CH2 CH3 Cl CH2 CH3 Cl Cl Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFC’s) F H C F Cl Depletes the ozone in the upper atmosphere Sect. 3.18: hydrogenation of alkenes C + C H H catalyst catalyst = Pt, Pd, Ni C C H H Hydrogenation is covered in more detail in Chap 4 we’ll cover it there. Hydrogenation is included in this chapter (briefly) because it is a method of making ALKANES. + H2 Pd H3C CH3 + H H Pt H2 CH3CH2CH2CH3