Title: Chapter 7 Structure and Synthesis of Alkenes
1Chapter 7Structure and Synthesis of Alkenes
Organic Chemistry, 5th EditionL. G. Wade, Jr.
Portions taken from Jo Blackburn Richland
College, Dallas, TX Dallas County Community
College District ã 2003, Prentice Hall And Singer
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2Functional Group
- Pi bond is the functional group.
- More reactive than sigma bond.
- Bond dissociation energies
- CC BDE 146 kcal/mol
- C-C BDE 83 kcal/mol
- Pi bond 63 kcal/mol
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3Physical Properties
- Low boiling points, increasing with mass.
- Branched alkenes have lower boiling points.
- Less dense than water.
- Slightly polar
- Pi bond is polarizable, so instantaneous
dipole-dipole interactions occur. - Alkyl groups are electron-donating toward the pi
bond, so may have a small dipole moment.
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5Polarity Examples
? 0.33 D
? 0
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6IUPAC Nomenclature
- Parent is longest chain containing the double
bond. - -ane changes to -ene. (or -diene, -triene)
- Number the chain so that the double bond has the
lowest possible number. - In a ring, the double bond is assumed to be
between carbon 1 and carbon 2.
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7Name These Alkenes
1-butene
2-sec-butyl-1,3-cyclohexadiene
2-methyl-2-butene
3-n-propyl-1-heptene
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3-methylcyclopentene
8Alkene Substituents
Common Names
- Usually used for small molecules.
9Cis-trans Isomerism
- Similar groups on same side of double bond,
alkene is cis. - Similar groups on opposite sides of double bond,
alkene is trans. - Cycloalkenes are assumed to be cis.
- Trans cycloalkenes are not stable unless the ring
has at least 8 carbons.
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10Name these
cis-1,2-dibromoethene
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trans-2-pentene
11E-Z Nomenclature
- Use the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog rules to assign
priorities to groups attached to each carbon in
the double bond. - If high priority groups are on the same side, the
name is Z (for zusammen). - If high priority groups are on opposite sides,
the name is E (for entgegen).
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12- Select the higher priority group on each carbon
in the double bond of the alkene. - If the higher priority groups are
- on opposite sides E (entgegen opposite)
- on the same side Z (zusammen together)
CH3 gt H Cl gt CH2CH3
(E)-3-chloro-2-pentene
(Z)-3-chloro-2-pentene
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14 Designate each double bond as E or Z, where
applicable.
high
E ethyl gt methyl COH gt H Z methyl gt H
CH2Br gt CH3 E CH2OH gt CH3 CH2CH2gt
H Note that the second double bond is neither E
nor Z since two groups are the same
high
high
high
high
high
geraniol
15Example, E-Z
High
High
High
High
2Z
5E
(2Z, 5E)-3,7-dichloro-2,5-octadiene
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16Orbital Description
- Sigma bonds around C are sp2 hybridized.
- Angles are approximately 120 degrees.
- No nonbonding electrons.
- Molecule is planar around the double bond.
- Pi bond is formed by the sideways overlap of
parallel p orbitals perpendicular to the plane of
the molecule.
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17sp2 hybrid orbitals
- To account for double bonds, a second type of
hybrid orbital must be pictured. An sp2 hybrid
is produced by combining one s and 2 p orbitals.
One p orbital remains.
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2p
2p
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2sp2
energy
2s
Unhybridized Hybridized
18sp2 hybrid orbitals
- The unhybridized p orbitals are able to overlap,
resulting in the formation of a second bond - p
bond.
A p bond is a sideways overlap that occurs
both above and below the plane of the
molecule Parts of the molecule are no longer
able to rotate about the bond.
19Ethene
Click on graphic to start animation
201s orbital
p overlap
sp2 hybrids
? bond
sp2 hybrids
p overlap
? bond
21Bonding in ethene
Click on graphic to start animation
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23Trigonal planar, BF3
Click on graphic to start animation
24Bond Lengths and Angles
- Hybrid orbitals have more s character.
- Pi overlap brings carbon atoms closer.
- Bond angle with pi orbitals increases.
- Angle CC-H is 121.7?
- Angle H-C-H is 116. 6? gt
25Pi Bond
- Sideways overlap of parallel p orbitals.
- No rotation is possible without breaking the pi
bond (63 kcal/mole). - Cis isomer cannot become trans without a chemical
reaction occurring.
26Elements of Unsaturation
- A saturated hydrocarbon CnH2n2
- Each pi bond (and each ring) decreases the number
of Hs by two. - Each of these is an element of unsaturation.
- To calculate find number of Hs if it were
saturated, subtract the actual number of Hs,
then divide by 2.
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27Heteroatoms
- Halogens take the place of hydrogens, so add
their number to the number of Hs. - Oxygen doesnt change the CH ratio, so ignore
oxygen in the formula. - Oxygen double bond?
- Nitrogen is trivalent, so it acts like half a
carbon.
28Commercial Uses Ethylene
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29Commercial Uses Propylene
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30Other Polymers
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31Stability of Alkenes
- Measured by heat of hydrogenation Alkene
H2 ? Alkane energy - More heat released, higher energy alkene.
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45Substituent Effects
- More substituted alkenes are more stable.H2CCH2
lt R-CHCH2 lt R-CHCH-R lt R-CHCR2 lt R2CCR2
unsub. lt monosub. lt disub. lt trisub. lt
tetra sub. - Alkyl group stabilizes the double bond.
- Alkene less sterically hindered.
46Disubstituted Isomers
- Stability cis lt geminal lt trans isomer
- Less stable isomer is higher in energy, has a
more exothermic heat of hydrogenation.
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