Chem Unit 2 (Haloalkanes) Flashcards

1
Q

Haloalkane is?

A

Alkane where one or more of the hydrogen atoms have been reeplaced by a halogen atom (e.g. CL, Br or F)

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2
Q

Naming Haloalkanes

A

1) carbon -stem name
2) Br, Cl, F in alphabetical order (2-di, 3-tri)
3) add methyl groups and positions

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3
Q

Free radical substitution (chloroalkanes)

A

1) start with a hydorcarbon e.g. CH4 +Cl2 = CH3Cl + Cl2 (take away one hydorgen atom, add HCl (see if there are any chlorine left to add on to new haloalkane) Keep repeating with each new haloalkane.

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4
Q

Formation/Breakage of ozone

A

present in small amounts at trosophere
broken down/ formed in large concentrations in stratosphere
02 > 0. + 0. (UV radiation breaks down oxygen into two free radicals)
0. + 02 > 03 (oxgyen radical collides with oxygen atom = ozone)
03 > 02 + 0. (UV breaks down ozone too)

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5
Q

Why is UV radiation bad?

A

UV damages biological life on earth (skin cancer)
Natural breaking down of ozone stops more reaching the earth’s surface
Overall its constant rate of breaking down = rate of forming

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6
Q

What is the problem with there being other radicals that can break down ozone?

A

Problem: radicals like chlorine radicals are in compounds that are made in large quantiites becuase they sre useful (CFC’s)
When these diffuse into the stratosphere, the UV radiation breaks the C-Cl bond to produc e achlorine radical which can react with ozone.to produce oxygen
Cl. + 03 > Cl0. + 02
This can react with anoterh ozone molecule
Cl0. + 03 > 202 + Cl.

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7
Q

add 2 equations to show ozone > oxygen

A

203 > 302

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8
Q

Why is chlorine breaking down ozone a problem?

A

Becuasee it ahs a lower activation energy than chlorine, so breaks down ozone way faster than oxygen breaks down and FORMS ozoen so the rate is not constant (destroying the ozone)

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9
Q

chlorine radical is a cat…?

A

catalyst so speeds up the rate fo reaction without being sued up itself

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10
Q

Order of reactivity for haloalkanes?

A

C-F (unreactive- too much energy needed)
C-Cl
C-Br
C-I

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11
Q

What are CFC’s and 3 uses of them?

A

gaseous haloalkanes

blowing foam plastics, AC, refridgerators

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12
Q

Do CFC’s occur naturally?

A

No

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13
Q

CFC’s naming?

A

C- 1) 2) 3)

1) Number of carbon atoms minus 1 (if 0 leave)
2) Number of hydrogen atoms plus 1
3) Number of fluroine atoms

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14
Q

Why were CFC’s considered so useful?

A

stable- didn’t react n aerosal cans/ or with blow-foam plastics/ low boiling point/loads were released into atmosphere

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15
Q

What is the problem with CFC’s being stable so they diffuse into stratosphere instead of trosophere?

A

problem: uv radiation breaks down the C-Cl bond into a chlorine radical (photodissocaition)
CF2Cl2 > (uv) C. F2Cl + Cl. (now reacts with ozone)

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16
Q

Initiation step of haloalkanes?

A

Cl2 > Cl. + Cl.

17
Q

Homolytic fission?

A

when a covalent bond breaks each atoms gets one electron (unpaired)
makes it very reactive
radical= atom with at least one unpaired electron

18
Q

First propagation step:

A

hydrocarbon + radical > hydrocarbon -hdrogen (as a radical- donated an electron) + HCL/HF/HBr (radical has gained an electron and joined with the donated hydrogen)
e.g CH4 + Cl. > CH3. + HCl

19
Q

Second Propagation step:

A

The hydrocarbon radical reacts with Cl2/F2/Br2 to a haloalkane with one atom from Cl2/F2 and the other one becomes a radical.

20
Q

If the reactant is a haloalkane and a radical..

A

haloalkane radical and a HCl/HBr ect

21
Q

If the reactant is a haloalkane radical and a Cl2 / br2 ect?

A

haloalkane and a free radical

22
Q

Termination step:

A

free radicals react with each other (rarely radical haloge atoms on their own)

  • unpaired electrons cancel each other out
    1) Look at a haloalkane radical product you’ve formed and react with a radical to make product they’re asking for
23
Q

Overall Equation:?

A

1) Look at last haloalkane product you’ve formed (asked in the question) (could be from termination step or a propagation step) and the product they want and balance the equation.

24
Q

use La Chatelier’s principle to show how an increase in termperature causes increase in yield of ozone?

A

As its an endothermic reaction, equilbrium shifts to absorb energy (moves to the right) > yield increases

25
Q

Nucleophilic substitution? properties of carbon-halogen bod?

A

polar (permanent dipole-dipole)
Halogen atom is $-
hydropgen atom, is $+
makes them able to do substitution

26
Q

What is a nucleophile?

A

molecule/ion with a lone pair of electrons that donates to froma a covalent bond

27
Q

What are nucleophiles attracted to?

A

The electron-deficient carbon atom ($+) C-H bond (donates a pair of electrons)
Br is $- (C-Br bond)- attracts more elctrons

28
Q

Conditions for Nucleophilic substitution with hydroxide ions (OH) ?

A

hydylosis- NaOH in aqueous solution or water

refuxed at low temperature

29
Q

As the size of molecule increases>bond strenth of carbon-halogen bond decreases so..?

A

hydrolysis is faster

30
Q

What is hydrolysis?

A

spllitting moleculs using water

31
Q

What is nucleophilic substitution?

A

replacing a halogen-carbon bond with a nucelophile-carbon bond

32
Q

OH nucelophile has to be in the same position as the …?

A

Br (halogen atom)

33
Q

For nucleophilic substitution for ammoia conditions:?

A
  • excess ammonia

- sealed container as ammonia is quite volatile

34
Q

Why do we use an excess of ammonia for nucleophilic subsitution?

A

To ensure the main product is a primary amine rather than a secondary or tertiary amine.

35
Q

Conditons fro nucleophilic substitution by cyanide ions?

A

Aquerous or ethanol (usually ethanol)
Reagent: KCN
excess CN- would need to be removed

36
Q

Elimination reaction conditions?

A
  • strong concentrated base (dissolved in enthanol)

- high temeorature

37
Q

Competition between nucleophilc subsituiin and elimiantion?

A

Aqueous/low temp- nucleophilic substituion

Concentrated/high temp- elimination