14 - Alkenes Flashcards

1
Q

Are alkenes saturated or unsaturated?

A

Unsaturated

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2
Q

What is a p orbital?

A

A bond containing a single electron on each carbon

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3
Q

What is a pi orbital?

A

The 2 p orbital overlap to form an orbital with a cloud of electron density above and below the bond which restricts rotation

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4
Q

Why can’t an alkene rotate?

A

There is a p orbital on each carbon.
They overlap to form an orbital with a cloud of electron density above and below the single bond - called a pi bond

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5
Q

How to decide which atom to look at when looking at EZ isomers

A

The atom with the highest atomic number

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6
Q

When is it E and when is it Z?

A

E if it is top and bottom
Z if it is just top/bottom

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7
Q

Are alkenes soluble in water?

A

No

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8
Q

Why are alkenes more reactive than alkanes?

A

C=C bond is electron rich which can be ‘attacked’ by positive reagents.

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9
Q

What is an electophile

A

An electron deficient atom, ion or molecule that takes part in an organic reaction my attacking areas of high electron density in another atom

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10
Q

How many electrons are there in the C=C double bond?

A

4

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11
Q

Steps for electrophilc addition reaction

A
  1. Electrophile is attracted to the double bond
  2. Electrophiles are positively charged and accept a pair of electrons from the double bond. Electrophile may be a positively charged ion or have a positively charged area
  3. A positive ion (carbocation) is formed
  4. Negatively charged ion forms a bond with the carbocation
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12
Q

Steps for hydrogen halide reaction

Eg ethene and hydrogen bromide

A
  1. Bromine is more electronegative than hydrogen so the hydrogen bromide molecule is polar (H∂+ — Br∂-)
  2. The Electrophile is the H∂+ of the H∂+ — Br∂-
  3. The H∂+ of HBr is attracted to the C=C bond because of the double bond’s high electron density
  4. One of the pairs of electrons from the C=C forms a bond with the H∂+ to form a positive ion (carbocation) whilst the electrons in the H∂+ — Br∂- bond are drawn to the Br∂-
  5. The bond in hydrogen bromide breaks heterolytically. Both electrons from the shared pair in the bond go to the bromine atom because it is more electronegative than hydrogen leaving a Br- ion
  6. The Br- ion attaches to the + charged carbon of the carbocation forming a bond with one of its electron pairs
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13
Q

Positive inductive effect

A

Described the tendency of some atoms or groups of atoms to release electrons via a covalent bond

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14
Q

Why is 2-bromopropane formed more than 1-bromopropane?

A

2-bromopropane has more alkyl groups surrounding it, so it is more stable

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15
Q

What is heterolytic fission?

A

When one of the atoms takes both of the shared pair of electrons

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16
Q

What is homolytic fission

A

Each atom takes one of the shared pair of electrons