Chapter 13 Organic Chemistry
Example 13.4
Draw the constitutional isomers of the alkane C
H 6
. 14
Our strategy is to start with the six-carbon continuous chain isomer and then successively reduce the length of the longest continuous c
hain by one carbon atom, while adding alkyl
groups to maintain six carbons. We do this un
til the branching chains are longer than our
continuous chain, at which poi
nt we are done. In the following, the first number is the
length of the longest chain, and the subse
quent number(s) are the lengths of the alkyl
groups. 6 + 0
: Isomer a
in the margin is the six-carbon chain with no side chains.
5 + 1
: One methyl group must be attached to a five-carbon chain. The methyl group
cannot be added to a terminal carbon (positions 1 or 5) because that would simply lengthen the chain and produce Isomer a. In addition, the 2 and 4 positions of a five-carbon chain are identical. Therefore, there are two isomers that have a five-carbon chain and one methyl group.
Isomer b
places the methyl group at position 2, and
Isomer c
places it at position 3. 4 + 2
: An ethyl group cannot be added to a four-carbon chain without lengthening the
chain, so there is no 4 + 2 isomer. If the ethyl gr
oup is placed at positions 1 or 4, the result
is Isomer a. If it is placed at either pos
ition 2 or position 3,
Isomer c is produced.
4 + 1 + 1
: The methyl groups cannot be added to the terminal carbons (positions 1 and
4), which leaves only positions 2 and 3. Adding one methyl to each position produces Isomer d,
and adding both methyl groups to the same position yields
Isomer e
. Note that
the 2 and 3 positions are identical, so there is no 3,3-dimethlybutane. 3 + 2 + 1
: The three-carbon chain is shown in blue in Figure (f) in the margin. Adding an
ethyl group to position 2 lengthens the chain
to four atoms to produce Isomer e.
3 + 3
: As shown in (g), adding a propyl group (three carbon alkyl group) to position 2 of a
three-carbon chain (blue bonds) lengthens the chain to five carbons. The resulting isomer is identical to Isomer b. We conclude that there
are no isomers of C
H 6
that have longest chains of less than four 14
atoms and that there are five constitutional isomers of C
H 6
. 14
STEREOISOMERS Stereoisomers have the same connectivity but differ in the
spatial
arrangement of their
atoms. We will consider two types of stereoisomers:
geometric isomers
and
enantiomers.
(a) hexane
(b) 2-methylpentane
(c) 3-methylpentane
(d) 2,3-dimethylbutane
(e) 2,2-dimethylbutane
(f) 2,2-dimethylbutane
Isomer (e)
(g) 2-methylpentane
Isomer (b)
3 2
4
3 2
5 4
1
1
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