CD deg: Aromatic compounds & their reactions Flashcards
Describe and draw the Kekulé structure of benzene.
Six-membered ring of carbon atoms with alternating single + double bonds.
Name 2 characteristics of benzene which were accurately predicted by the Kekulé model.
- Bond angles 120o
- Planar
Name three issues with the Kekulé model of the structure of benzene.
- Unexpected unreactivity with bromine water
- Discrepancy between observed and expected bond lengths (shapes)
- Discrepancy between observed and expected enthalpies of hydrogenation
Explain why benene’s unreactivity with bromine water was not accounted for by the Kekulé model of its structure. State the conclusion that this issue pointed towards.
- Kekulé model contains 3 C=C bonds, so benzene was expected to react with + decolourise bromine water
- Unreactivity suggests either that benzene has no double bonds, or that something makes those present less reactive
Explain why benene’s shape was not accounted for by the Kekulé model of its structure. State the conclusion that this issue pointed towards.
- Kekulé structure contains C-C + C=C bonds. C=C bonds are shorter so bonds in benzene expected to be different lengths
- All bonds in benzene are same length, so Kekulé bonding is incorrect
Explain why benzene’s enthalpy of hydrogenation was not accounted for by the Kekulé model of its structure. State the conclusion that this issue pointed towards.
- Enthalpy of hydrogenation of cyclohexa-1,3-diene is approximately twice that of cyclohexene, since it has twice as many double bonds, so that of benzene was expected to be 3 x that of cyclohexene
- Enthalpy of hydrogenation of benzene is lower than that of cyclohexa-1,3-diene
- Benzene’s structure is stabler than suggested by Kekulé model
Describe and draw the delocalised model of benzene.
- Carbon p-orbitals perpendicular to ring overlap, so electrons delocalise
- Forms circular π-orbitals above and below ring, containing 6 electrons overall
Like a bagel sandwich. Each carbon has 4 valence e-: 1 goes to C-H bond, 2 go to C-C bonds, 1 left over. 6 spare e- delocalise
Explain how the issues with the Kekulé model of benzene’s structure were rectified by the delocalised model.
Unreactivity with bromine water: carbon p-orbitals perpendicular to ring overlap, forming circular π-orbitals above and below ring. Delocalisation makes benzene stable, so doesn’t readily react by addition
Discrepancy between observed + expected shape: all bonds are equal length due to delocalisation
Discrepancy between observed + expected enthalpies of hydrogenation: delocalisation makes benzene stable, so hydrogenation doesn’t make benzene much more stable, so is less exothermic than predicted
Name this molecule:
1-ethyl-4-methyl benzene
Minimisation of numbers takes priority over alphabetical order (in this case, it would be 1-4 either way, so is in alphabetical order)
Name the following molecules:
Chlorobenzene, nitrobenzene, benzoic acid, benzene sulfonic acid
-NO2 = nitro group, -SO3H = sulfonic acid group
Name this molecule:
2-phenylbut-2-ene
Phenyl prefix is used to represent benzene when suffix is occupied
Name this molecule:
Phenylamine
Phenyl prefix is used to represent benzene when suffix is occupied
Name the following:
- C6H5OOCCH3
- C6H5COOCH2CH(NH2)CH3
- Phenyl ethanoate (molecular formula was written backwards)
- 2-amino propylbenzoate
What is an arene?
A molecule containing a benzene ring.
All arenes are aromatic, but this isn’t reversible
What are the conditions required for aromaticity?
Molecule must:
- Be cyclic
- Be planar
- Contain 4n + 2 delocalised π-electrons (where n = non-zero integer)