Hydrocarbons
Concepts Related to Hydrocarbons
Alkanes:
- Saturated hydrocarbons with only single C-C bonds
- Formula: CnH2n+2
- Structures: Acyclic (straight-chain) or cyclic (ring structures)
Alkenes:
- Unsaturated hydrocarbons with at least one C=C double bond
- Formula: CnH2n
- Structures: Acyclic (straight-chain) or cyclic (ring structures)
- Geometric isomerism: Cis-trans isomerism due to the restricted rotation around double bonds
Alkynes:
- Unsaturated hydrocarbons with at least one C≡C triple bond
- Formula: CnH2n-2
- Structures: Acyclic (straight-chain) or cyclic (ring structures)
Aromatic hydrocarbons:
- Cyclic, unsaturated hydrocarbons with alternating C=C double bonds and single C-C bonds
- Formula: (e.g.) C6H6 for benzene, but different for more complex rings.
- Special stability: Due to resonance and the delocalized π-electron cloud
- Reactions: Electrophilic aromatic substitution.
Cycloalkanes:
- Saturated cyclic hydrocarbons with only C-C single bonds
- Formula: CnH2n
- Structures: Can have different conformations, such as chair and boat in cyclohexane
Functionalization of Hydrocarbons
- **Alkanes:**Substitution reactions (halogenation, nitration, sulfonation), combustion, free radical reactions
- Alkenes and alkynes: Addition reactions (hydrogenation, halogens, water, hydrogen halides), electrophilic addition (Markovnikov’s rule), hydration, polymerization, combustion
- Aromatic electrophilic substitution: Nitration, halogenation, sulfonation, Friedel-Crafts reactions.
Additional Concepts:
- Structural isomers (same formula, different connectivity) vs. constitutional isomers (different formulas).
- IUPAC system to name hydrocarbons systematically according to specific rules based on the structure.
- Heats of combustion and enthalpy changes provide insights into energy-related aspects of hydrocarbon reactions.
- Environmental consequences like the greenhouse effect, fossil fuel utilization, and hydrocarbon pollutant impact.