TOPIC 12 Flashcards

1
Q

What are alkanes?

A
  • The main components of natural gas and crude oil
  • Most stable organic compounds and lack of reactivity had allowed crude oil deposits remain in the earth for millions of years- they are unreactive due to the high bond enthalpies of C-C and C-H bonds and low polarity of sigma bonds
  • Alkanes are mainly used as fuels, reactions with oxygen to generate heat
  • They are hydrocarbons because they contain hydrogen and carbon atoms only
  • They have the general formula CnH2n+2
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2
Q

What is the bonding in alkanes?

A
  • they are saturated hydrocarbons containing carbon and hydrogen atoms joined together by single covalent bonds
  • Each carbon atom in an alkane is joined to four other atoms by single covalent bonds called a sigma bond
  • Covalent bond is defined as a shared pair of electrons and a sigma bond is the result if the overlap between 2 orbitals, one from each bonding atom
  • Each overlapping orbital contains one electron so the sigma bond has 2 electrons that are shared between the bonding atoms. The sigma bond is positioned on a line directly between bonding atoms
  • Each carbon atom in an alkane has four sigma bond either C-C or C-H
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3
Q

What is the shape of alkanes?

A
  • each carbon atom is surrounded by 4 electron pairs/bonding electrons in four sigma bonds that repel each other equally resulting in a tetrahedral arrangement and a bond angle of 109.5 degrees
  • Electron pair repulsion theory state that regions of negative charge about an atom will repel each other as far apart as possible
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4
Q

How can crude oil be separated?

A

Crude oil contains hundreds of different alkanes that can be separated by fractional distillation because different alkanes have different boiling points, increasing as their carbon length increases

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5
Q

What is the effect of chain length on boiling point?

A
  • London forces act between molecules that are in close surface contact
  • As chain length increases the molecules have a larger surface area so more surface contact is possible
  • Therefore there is more London forces/induced dipole dipole forces between the molecules and so more energy is required to overcome the forces
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6
Q

What is the effect of branches on the boiling point?

A

Branched isomers have a lower boiling point than straight chain isomers as there is less surface contact since they can’t pack as closely together and fewer London forces/induced dipole-dipole interactions therefore less energy is needed to break the bonds.

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7
Q

Why are alkanes unreactive?

A
  • C-C and C-H sigma bonds are strong
  • C-C bonds are non polar
  • The electronegativity of carbon and hydrogen are so similar the C-H bond can be considered non polar
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8
Q

What is the complete combustion of alkanes?

A
  • burn completely to produce CO2 and H20
  • Highly exothermic reaction
  • Gives blue flame
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9
Q

What is the incomplete combustion of alkanes? What are the consequences of CO buildup?

A
  • not enough oxygen for complete combustion due to limited oxygen
  • Flame is orange due to carbon particles glowing red
  • happens when combustion is attempted in a closed system like a car engine
  • carbon monoxide is produced which is highly toxic and can lead to death if it builds up in faulty heating appliances
  • Carbon monoxide is a better competitor than oxygen and can bind to haemoglobin preventing oxygen transport around the body.
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10
Q

What are the problems with free radical substitution?

A
  • Radicals are extremely reactive so further substitution can happen and also reactions at different positions along the carbon chain
  • Can produce compounds that are not necessarily required
  • You can also produce longer alkane chains which need to be separated from desired haloalkane (mixture of organic products)
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11
Q

What is general formula?

A

The simplest algebraic formula for a member of the homologous series

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12
Q

What is displayed formula?

A

The relative positioning of atoms and the bonds between them

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13
Q

What is the homologous series?

A

A series of organic compounds having the same functional group but each successive member differing by CH2

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14
Q

What is the functional group?

A

Group of atoms responsible for the characteristic reactions of a compound

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15
Q

What is the formula for an alkyl group?

A

CnH2n+1

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16
Q

What is aliphatic?

A

Refers to straight chain hydrocarbons, branched chains and non aromatic rings

17
Q

What is alicyclic?

A

An aliphatic compound arranged in non aromatic rings with or without side chains

18
Q

What is an aromatic compound?

A

Contains a benzene ring

19
Q

What are saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons?

A

Saturated- carbon-carbon single bonds

Unsaturated- carbon to carbon double bonds

20
Q

What are structural isomers?

A

Compounds with the same molecular formula but a different structural formulae

21
Q

What is homolytic fission?

A

Each of the bonding atoms receiving an electron from the bonding pair forming 2 free radicals

22
Q

What is heterolytic fission?

A

One bonding atom receives both electrons from the bonded pair