4.3 ALKENES Flashcards

1
Q

Alkene double bond.

A

Alkene double bond:
-carbon atom has 4 electrons in outer shell for bonding
-for each C atom in a double bond, 3 electrons are used in sigma bonds
-last electrons is p-orbital perpendicular to plane atoms lie on
-p-orbitals from C atoms in a double bond overlap sideways = pi bond
-pi electron density lied above and below the plane of carbon atoms
-pi bond locks the carbon atoms in position, preventing rotation around the double bond

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2
Q

What is the difference between pi and sigma bond?

A

Difference between pi and sigma bond:
sigma- head on overlap of orbitals
pi- sideways overlap of p-orbitals

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3
Q

Reactivity of alkenes.

A

Reactivity of alkenes:
-alkenes more reactive than alkanes because of pi bond
-pi electrons more exposed because pi electron density lies above and below the plane of the bonding atoms
-pi bond with readily break as it is weaker than sigma bond

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4
Q

Addition reactions.

A

Addition reactions:
-characteristic reaction of alkenes
-occurs when pi bond breaks and two new atoms or groups are added to the molecule

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5
Q

What is halogenation?

A

Halogenation:
-bromination useful for distinguishing alkanes from alkenes
-orange colour of bromine turns colourless when Br reacts with double bond

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6
Q

What is hydrogenation?

A

Hydrogenation:
-addition of hydrogen to produce ethane
-ethane passes over a nickel catalyst at 423K
-all C=C bonds in an alkene would react if there is excess hydrogen

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7
Q

What is hydrohalogenation?

A

Hydrohalogenation:
-addition of gaseous hydrogen halides at room temperature to produce haloalkanes

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8
Q

What is hydration?

A

Hydration:
-addition of steam to produce ethanol
-an acid catalyst is used (phosphonic acid or concentrated sulfuric acid)

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9
Q

Electrophilic addition.

A

Electrophilic addition:
-alkene addition reactions from saturated compounds (mechanism is electrophilic addition)
-the double bond in an alkene represents a region of high electron density due to the presence of the pi-electrons. this region of high electron density attracts electrophiles

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9
Q

Electrophilic addition.

A

Electrophilic addition:
-alkene addition reactions from saturated compounds (mechanism is electrophilic addition)
-the double bond in an alkene represents a region of high electron density due to the presence of the pi-electrons. this region of high electron density attracts electrophiles

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10
Q

Electrophilic addition.

A

Electrophilic addition:
-alkene addition reactions from saturated compounds (mechanism is electrophilic addition)
-the double bond in an alkene represents a region of high electron density due to the presence of the pi-electrons. this region of high electron density attracts electrophiles

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11
Q

What are electrophiles?

A

Electrophiles are an electron pair acceptor that contain positive or partial negative change in structure

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12
Q

Addition of a polar molecule.

A

Addition of a polar molecule (e.g HCl with ethene):
1. Cl is more electronegative than H do HCl is polar and contains a dipole. HCl is an electrophile so is strongly attracted to the electrons in the pi bond
2. the electron pair in the pi bond is attracted to the partially positive H atom causing the double bond to break
3. a bond forms between H atom of H-Cl molecule and C atom that was a part of the double bond
4. the H-Cl bond breaks by heterolytic fission, with the electron pair going to the Cl atom
5. Cl ion and carbocation are formed
6. Cl ion reacts with the carbocation to form the addition product

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13
Q

What is Markowinoff’s rule?

A

Markiwinoff’s rule:
-the most stable carbocation will form the major product
-each alkyl group donates and pushes electrons towards the positive carboncation charge
-the more alkyl groups attached to the positive carbon centre, the more the positive charge is spread out so the more stable the ion is

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14
Q

Addition of a non-polar molecule.

A

Addition of a non-polar molecule:
1. Cl is a non-polar molecule, when it approaches an alkene the pi electrons cause polarisation of the Cl-Cl bond (induced dipole)
2. the electron pair in the pi bond moves towards the Cl delta positive end of the molecule causing the double bond to break and a bond to form between one of the carbon atoms from the double bond and a Cl atom
3. the Cl-Cl bond breaks by heterolytic fission with the electron pair going to the Cl delta positive end of the molecule
4. a Cl ion and a carbocation are formed
5. the Cl- ion reacts with the carbocation to form the addition product

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15
Q

What is a monomer?

A

A monomer is a small molecule that combines with many other monomers to form a polymer

16
Q

What is a polymer?

A

A polymer is a large molecule formed from many thousands of repeat units of smaller molecules known as monomers

17
Q

What is addition polymerisation?

A

Addition polymerisation is the formation of a very long molecular chain by repeated addition reactions of many unsaturated alkene molecules (monomers)
-this is carried out at high temperature, pressure and in the presence of catalysts

18
Q

How are waste polymers disposed of?

A

Waste polymers are mostly biodegradable. Schemes are in place to be able to recycle polymers, use polymers as fuel, feedstock recycling, PVC recycling. Biodegradable and photodegradable polymers are also being developed from plants