PROBLEM 3Draw the structures and give the common and systematic names for the seven alkynes with
molecular formulaPROBLEM 4Give the systematic name for each of the following compounds:a. c.b. d.PROBLEM 5Which would you expect to be more stable, an internal alkyne or a terminal alkyne? Why?6.2 Physical Properties of
Unsaturated Hydrocarbons
All hydrocarbons have similar physical properties. In other words, alkenes and
alkynes have physical properties similar to those of alkanes (Section 2.9). All are in-
soluble in water and all are soluble in solvents with low polarity such as benzene and
ether. They are less dense than water and, like other homologous series, have boiling
points that increase with increasing molecular weight (Table 6.1). Alkynes are more
linear than alkenes, and a triple bond is more polarizable than a double bond
(Section 2.9). These two features cause alkynes to have stronger van der Waals inter-
actions. As a result, an alkyne has a higher boiling point than an alkene containing the
same number of carbon atoms.
Internal alkenes have higher boiling points than terminal alkenes. Similarly, inter-
nal alkynes have higher boiling points than terminal alkynes. Notice that the boiling
point of cis-2-butene is slightly higher than that of trans-2-butene because the cis iso-
mer has a small dipole moment, whereas the dipole moment of the trans isomer is zero
(Section 3.4).CH 3 CH 2 CHC CHCH 2 CH 2 CH 3CH 3 CH 2 CHC CCH 2 CHCH 3Br ClBrCH 2 CH 2 C CCH 3 CH 3 OCH 2 C CCH 2 CH 3C 6 H 12.240 CHAPTER 6 Reactions of Alkynes • Introduction to Multistep SynthesisTable 6.1 Boiling Points of the Smallest Hydrocarbonsbp (°C) bp (°C) bp (°C)ethane ethene ethynepropane propene propyne8
butane 1-butene 1-butyne36.1 30 39
pentane 1-pentene 1-pentyne68.7 63.5 71
hexane 1-hexene 1-hexyne3.7 27
cis-2-butene 2-butyne0.9 55
trans-2-butene 2-pentyneCH 3 CH“CHCH 3 CH 3 CH 2 C‚CCH 3CH 3 CH“CHCH 3 CH 3 C‚CCH 3CH 3 (CH 2 ) 4 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH“CH 2 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 C‚CHCH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH“CH 2 CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 C‚CHCH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 - 0.5 CH 3 CH 2 CH“CH 2 - 6.5 CH 3 CH 2 C‚CHCH 3 CH 2 CH 3 - 42.1 CH 3 CH“CH 2 - 47 CH 3 C‚CH - 23CH 3 CH 3 - 88.6 H 2 C“CH 2 - 104 HC‚CH - 84BRUI06-238_262r4 24-03-2003 11:47 AM Page 240