12.1 Properties of the Alkanes Flashcards
What are alkanes
The main components of natural gas and crude oil.
Amongst the most stable organic compounds and their lack of reactivity has allowed crude oil deposits to remain in the Earth for many millions of years
What are alkanes mainly used for
As fuels, exploiting their reaction with oxygen to generate heat
What is the general formula of alkanes
CnH(2n+2)
Alkanes are ______ hydrocarbons, containing only ______ and ______ atoms joined together by ______ covalent bonds
Saturated
Carbon
Hydrogen
Single
What is a sigma bond
σ- bond
Each carbon atom in an alkane is joined to four other atoms by single covalent bonds
What is a σ- bond the result of
Sigma bond
The result of the overlap of two orbitals, one from each bonding atom
Each overlapping orbital contains oe electron so the σ- bond has two electrons that are shared between the bonding atoms
How many sigma bonds does each carbon atom in an alkane have
Four
Either C-C or C-H
What is the shape around each carbon atom in an alkane
Tetrahedral arrangement
Each bond angle around 109.5
How do oil refineries separate the crude oil into fractions
By fractional distillation in a distillation tower
How is fractional distillation possible
Because the boiling points of the alkanes are different, increasing as their chain length increases
Why does the boiling point of the alkanes increase
The weak, intermolecular London forces hold molecules together in solids and liquids but once broken, the molecules move apart from each other and the alkane becomes a gas. The greater the intermolecular forces, the higher the boiling point.
What happens to the boiling point as chain length (of an alkane) increases, and why?
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 between molecules
London forces between will be greater so more energy required to overcome the forces
Increased chain length,
Greater surface area of contact
Stronger London forces
Isomers of alkanes have the same…
…molecular mass
What do you find when you compare the boiling points of branched isomers with straight-chain isomers
You find that the branched isomers have lower boiling points