higher temperatures, or in the presence of sunlight or other sources of ultraviolet light,
H atoms in the hydrocarbon can be replaced easily by halogen atoms. These substitution
reactions are called halogenationreactions.
The reaction is represented as
Many organic reactions produce more than a single product. For example, the chlori-
nation of CH 4 may produce several other products in addition to CH 3 Cl, as the following
equations show.
When a hydrocarbon has more than one C atom, its reaction with Cl 2 is more complex.
The first step in the chlorination of ethane gives the product that contains one Cl atom
per molecule.
When a second hydrogen atom is replaced, a mixture of the two possible products is
obtained.
Cl Cl H
H
H
C HCl
heat or
UV
ethane chloroethane
(ethyl chloride)
bp 13.1C
H
CCl
H
HH
H
H
C
H
C
H
CClCl
Cl
Cl Cl
H
Cl C Cl
Cl
Cl
HCl
tetrachloromethane
(carbon tetrachloride)
bp 76.8C
H
Cl CClCl Cl
H
Cl
H
C Cl
Cl
HCl
trichloromethane
(chloroform)
bp 61 C
H
H
H CClCl Cl Cl
H
H
C Cl HCl
dichloromethane
(methylene chloride)
bp 40.2C
H
H
H
CClClH H
H
H
C Cl HCl
heat or
UV
methane chlorine chloromethane
(methyl chloride)
bp 23.8C
Note that only one half of the chlorine
atoms occur in the organic product.
The other half form hydrogen
chloride, a commercially valuable
compound.
1086 CHAPTER 27: Organic Chemistry I: Formulas, Names, and Properties