9C. Arenes Flashcards

1
Q

Arenes

A
  • aromatic hydrocarbons are collectively called arenes
  • benzene is the simplest arene
  • all arenes contain one or more benzene-like rings
  • polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons contain two or more benzene rings, with each pair of rings sharing two adjacent carbon atoms
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2
Q

Benzene

A
  • consists of six carbon atoms in a ring with six hydrogen atoms, one off each carbon
  • bonding between each carbon atom is neither single nor double, but a hygrid of the two + therefore very stable
  • C6H6 benzene molecules are of planar formation, with each carbon-carbon bond of equal length + all bond angle sare 120o
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3
Q

Naming Benzene derivatives

A
  • similar to alkanes + alkenes, except that benzene is generally considered the parent
  • for compounds where more than one substituent is attached to the ring, two systems may be used to identify their position
    1. the carbon atoms are numbered from 1 to 6, beginning with the carbon that is bonded to the first group + continuing in such a direction as to lead to the lowest numbers for the remaining groups
    2. only applies if there are two substituents. The prefixes ortho-, meta- + para- are used to identify positions that are adjacent to the first group
  • for some compounds it is easier to consider the benzene ringas the attached group + the longest carbon chain as the parent group. In this case the benzene ring is known as phenyl + the same rule as for alkanes and alkenes apply
  • where there are two or more substituents on the ring + one of them imparts a common name for the compound, the compound is named as a derivativie of that common parent molecule + it is assumed that the substituent occupies ring position 1
  • for substituents that don’t impart a common name, each is numbered in such a manner as to give the smallest set of numbers + then listed in alphabetical order before the ending of ‘benzene’
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4
Q

Reaction of Benzene + its derivatives

A
  • most characteristic reaction of aromatic compounds is aromatic substitution, whereby a hydrogen atom attached to a ring carbon is substituted by another atom or group, particularly halogens or the nitro group, -NO2, or the sulfonic group, -SO3H
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5
Q

Aryl Group

A
  • substituent group derived from an arene by removal of a hydrogen atom
  • commonly represented by the symbol Ar-
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6
Q

Phenyl Group

A
  • substituent group derived from benzene by removal of a hydrogen atom, C6H5
  • commonly represented by the symbol Ph-
  • in molecules containing other functional groups, phenyl groups are often named as substituents
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7
Q

Halogenation

A
  • a hydrogen is substituted by a halogen, particularly chlorine or bromine, in the presence of a catalyst, particularly iron
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8
Q

Nitration

A

nitration

  • when benzene or one of its derivatives is heated with a mixture of concentrated nitric + sulfuric acids, a nito group, -NO2, replaces one of the hydrogen atoms bonded to the ring
  • nitration is of particular value as the resulting -NO2 group can be reduced to a primary amino group -NH2 by catalytic reduction using hydrogen in the presence of a transition metal catalyst
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9
Q

Sulfonation

A
  • heating an aromatic compound with concentrated sulfuric acid results in the formation of an arenesulfonic acid, all of which are strong acids comparable in strength to sulfuric acid
  • a major use of sulfonation is in the preparation of synthetic detergents
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