Chapter 13 Organic Chemistry
be three additional bonds, which are assumed to be C-H bonds, which makes the end positions CH
groups. There are two bonds drawn to the two carbon atoms in the middle, 3
so there must also be two C-H bonds to each. These intersections represent CH
groups. 2
There is only one way to connect the atom
s in each of the alkanes shown in Figure
13.1, but there are multiple ways to connect th
e atoms in all other alkanes. Consider the
four-carbon alkane C
H 4
. Figure 13.2 and Figure 13.3a show C 10
H 4
as a 10
straight
or
continuous chain
hydrocarbon (no carbon bound to more
than two other carbons).
However, C
H 4
can also exist as a 10
branched
hydrocarbon (at least one carbon atom
bound to three or four other carbon atoms), as shown in Figure 13.3b. The two structures shown in Figure 13.3 have the same formula, C
H 4
, but they are different molecules. 10
Different molecules with the same formula are called
isomers
. The two molecules shown
in Figure 13.3 are the two isomers of C
H 4
. The number of isomers can be very large for 10
a formula containing a large number of carbon atoms. Isomers are prevalent in organic chemistry and are one of the reasons there is such a diversity of organic molecules. We consider isomers in more
detail in Section 13.3.
The two major sources of alkanes are natural gas (mostly CH
and C 4
H 2
) and 6
petroleum (a mixture of thousands of substa
nces, mainly hydrocarbons that were formed
from the decomposition of plants and animals). Although alkanes are not very reactive, they do burn. As discussed in Section 9.3, combustion of alkanes such as C
H 3
(propane, 8
home heating and cooking), C
H 4
(butane, lighter fluid), and C 10
H 8
(octane, a component 18
of gasoline) are an important source of heat and power. As an example, the combustion of propane is
C^3
H^8
(g) + 5O
(g) 2
→
3CO
(g) + 4H 2
O(l) 2
ΔH
o = -2220 kJ/mol
C-H and C-C bond cleavage during a combustion
reaction is homolytic,* so each atom
in the bond retains one of the bonding
electrons to produce two species, called
free
radicals
, that have unpaired electrons (Figure 13.4). Free radicals are highly reactive, but
they are stabilized when the unpaired electron
is on an atom that is attached to other
carbon-containing groups. Thus, free radicals formed from highly branched carbon atoms, such as (CH
) 33
.C
, are more stable and less reactive th
an those formed from straight chain
hydrocarbons. Indeed, straight chain hydrocarbons react so fast and violently that they can cause an engine to ‘knock’. The octane
rating of a gasoline indicates the extent of
knocking it causes. The reference molecules ar
e shown in Figure 13.5. The straight chain
hydrocarbon C
H 7
causes substantial knocking and is 16
assigned an octane rating of 0,
H^3
C
H^2 C
CH^2
CH
3
(a)
CH
3
CH
H^3
CCH
3
(b)
Figure 13.3 Straight or continuous chain (a) and branched (b) isomers of C
H 4
(^10)
CH
3
CH
C 3
CH
3
H^3
CC
CH
3
CH
H C 3
H
H
- H C
H
H
Figure 13.4 Free radicals have unpaired electrons Homolytic bond cleavage of a C-C bond produces two free radicals. The radicals are stabilized when the carbon atom with the unpaired electron is bound to one or more carbon atoms, so (CH
) 33
.C
is more stable and less reactive than H
C 3
..
HC^3
H^2 C
CH^2
H^2 C
CH^2
H^2 C
CH
3
HCCC^3
H^2
CH
CH
3
CH
3
CH
3
CH
3
octane rating = 0
octane rating = 100
Figure 13.5 Reference molecules used in establishing the octane rating of a gasoline
- Bond breaking in which one bonding electron resides on each atom
after the bond is broken is called
homolytic
bond cleavage. If both
bonding electrons remain on one atom after the bond breaks, the cleavage is said to be
heterolytic
.
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