Module 4.1 - Basic concepts and hydrocarbons Flashcards
What is a structural formula?
Shows the arrangement of atoms carbon by carbon, with the attached hydrogens and functional groups.
What is a skeletal formula?
Shows the bonds of the carbon skeleton only, with any functional groups. The hydrogen and carbon atoms aren’t shown.
Why is skeletal formula used?
Useful for large complicated structures, like cyclic hydrocarbons.
What is a displayed formula?
Shows how all the atoms are arranged, and all the bonds between them.
What is a homologous series?
A bunch of organic compounds that have the same functional group and general formula.
What is the general formula for alkanes?
CnH2n+2
Describe an aliphatic hydrocarbon skeleton?
In which the C atoms are joined together in either straight (unbranched) chains or branched chains.
Describe an aromatic hydrocarbon skeleton?
In one which there is at least one benzene ring in the structure.
Describe an alicyclic hydrocarbon skeleton?
In which the C atoms are joined together in a ring structure but are NOT aromatic.
What does a compound being saturated mean?
Only contain C-C single bonds - like alkanes.
What does a compound being unsaturated mean?
Can have C=C double bonds, triple bonds or aromatic groups.
What is an alkyl group and what is it’s general formula?
An alkyl group is a fragment of a molecule and it has the general formula CnH2n+2.
What is the prefix/stem for a compound with 1 carbon?
Meth-
Name the 4 stems for 1-4 number of carbons in a compound?
Meth-, eth-, prop- and but-
What is an isomer?
Two molecules are isomers of one another if they have the same molecular formula but the atoms are arranged differently.
What makes a chain isomer?
The carbon skeleton can be arranged differently - for example as a straight chain or branched. These isomers have similar chemical properties - but their physical properties like boiling point, will be different because of the change in shape of the molecule.
What makes a positional isomer?
The skeleton and the functional group could be the same, only with the functional group attached to a different carbon atom. These also have different physical properties, and the chemical properties could be different.
What makes a functional group isomer?
The same atoms can be arranged into different functional groups. These have very different physical and chemical properties.
What shape are alkane molecules?
In an alkane molecule, each C atom has 4 pairs of bonding electrons around it. They all repel each other equally. So, the molecule forms a tetrahedral shape around each carbon. Each bond angle is 109.5 degrees.
What happens if you burn (oxidise) alkanes with oxygen?
It is a combustion reaction so you get carbon dioxide and water.
What form must alkanes be to combust?
Combustion reactions take place between gases, so liquid alkanes have to be vaporised first. Smaller alkanes turn into gases more easily (volatile) so they’ll burn more easily.
Why do alkanes make excellent fuels?
Larger alkanes release heaps more energy per mole because they have more bonds to react. And, because they release so much energy when they burn.
What happens if you burn alkanes when there isn’t oxygen?
Incomplete combustion will take place and carbon monoxide and water produced.
How is carbon monoxide poisonous?
Carbon monoxide is better at binding to haemoglobin than oxygen is, so it binds to the haemoglobin in your bloodstream before the oxygen can. This means that less oxygen can be carried around your body, leading to oxygen deprivation. At very high concentrations, carbon monoxide can be fatal.
What is bond fission?
Breaking a covalent bond.
What is heterolytic fission?
In heterolytic fission the bond breaks unevenly with one of the bonded atoms receiving both electrons from the bonded pair. Two different substances are formed - a positively charged cation and a negatively charged anion.
What is homolytic fission?
In homolytic fission, the bond breaks evenly and each bonding atom receives one electron from the bonded pair. 2 electrically uncharged ‘radicals’ are formed.
What are radicals?
Radicals are particles that have an unpaired electron. Because of the unpaired electron, radicals are very reactive.
What does a curly arrow show?
The movement of an electron pair.
Why do halogen and alkane reactions require UV light to start?
Halogens react with alkanes in photochemical reactions and these reactions are started by light.
What forms when halogens and alkanes react together?
Forms haloalkanes.
When a hydrogen atom is substituted (replaced) by a chlorine, bromine etc, what is this reaction called?
Free-radical substitution reaction.
What are the 3 stages of a free radical substitution reaction mechanism?
Initiation, Propagation and Termination.
What happens in the initiation stage of a free radical substitution reaction mechanism?
> Free radicals are produced.
1) Sunlight provides enough energy to break the (example - Cl-Cl) bond - this is photodissociation.
2) The bond splits equally and each atom gets to keep one electron (homolytic fission). The atom becomes a highly reactive free radical.
What happens in the propagation stage of a free radical substitution reaction mechanism?
> Free radicals are used up and created in a chain reaction.
1) A radical attacks another molecule.
2) A new radical is formed and attacks another molecule.
3) The new radicals can continue to attack other molecules until all the molecules are wiped out.
What happens in the termination stage of a free radical substitution reaction mechanism?
> Free radicals are mopped up.
1) If 2 radicals join together, they make a stable molecule.
2) There are heaps of possible termination reactions.