308 17 · ORGANIC CHEMISTRY: HYDROCARBONS
from combustion reactions they are not particularly chemically reactive. They are
found in crude oil and natural gas and are used extensively as fuels, or as starting
materials for a wide variety of organic compounds. The first four members of the
alkane family, which are all gases at 25 °C, are shown in Table 17.1. The alkanes
belong to a larger classification of compounds, the hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons
are organic compounds that contain the elements carbon and hydrogen only. The
alkanes have the general formula CnH 2 n 2 wheren, the number of carbon atoms, is
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and so on. A family of compounds whose formulae differ by –CH 2 is
called a homologous series.
After butane, the names of higher alkanes are taken from the Latin or Greek pre-
fix for the number of carbon atoms in one molecule of the alkane:
Name Number of carbon atoms
Pentane 5
Hexane 6
Heptane 7
Octane 8
Nonane 9
Decane 10
Undecane 11
Dodecane 12
Writing the structural formulae of the higher alkanes can take up a great deal of
space, so we often write condensed structural formulae. For example, the struc-
tural formula of pentane can be written in four different ways. These are shown
below:
HHHHH
|||||
H—C—C—C—C—C—Hor CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 or CH 3 (CH 2 ) 3 CH 3 or
|||||
HHHHH
Table 17.1The first four alkanes
Name Molecular formula Structural formula
Methane (natural gas) CH 4 H
|
H—C—H
|
H
Ethane C 2 H 6 HH
||
H—C—C—H
||
HH
Propane (camping gas) C 3 H 8 HHH
|||
H—C—C—C—H
|||
HHH
HHHH
||||
Butane (lighter fuel) C 4 H 10 H—C—C—C—C—H
||||
HHHH
Alkanes
(i) The alkanes are
covalent compounds.
Write Lewis structures
for ethane and
propane.
(ii)Write the molecular and
structural formulae for
octane.
(iii)What is the molecular
formula for dodecane,
which has 12 carbon
atoms?
Exercise 17A