What are alkanes?
Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons that contain carbon atoms which are sp3 hybridised and are tetrahedrally bonded to either H atom or other C atoms
What is the general formula of alkanes?
CnH2n+2
What is the general formula of cycloalkanes?
CnH2n
What happens to the melting and boiling point of alkanes as the number of C atom increases and why?
Melting and boiling point increases as alkanes have simple covalent structures and as the number of C atoms increases, the number of electrons in the molecule increases and more energy is required to overcome the stronger id-id interactions between molecules
Are alkanes more or less dense than water and why?
Less dense, the packing of alkane molecules is less as compared to water molecules due to weaker id-id interactions between alkane molecules compared to the stronger hydrogen bonds between water molecules
What happens to the density of alkanes as the number of C atoms increases and why?
Density increases as when the number of carbon atom increases, molar mass increases, density increases as the increase in molar mass outweighs the increase in volume
Are alkanes soluble in water and why?
All alkanes are insoluble in water
- Alkanes cannot form effective interactions with water molecules
- During the dissolution of alkanes in water, the energy needed to overcome the stronger hydrogen bonds between water molecules is not compensated by the energy released when weaker id-id are formed between alkane and water molecules
Are alkanes generally reactive or unreactive and why?
Alkanes are generally unreactive towards polar and ionic reagents
- alkanes are non-polar thus unreactive towards polar reagents
- C-C and C-H bonds are very strong, a large amount of energy is required to overcome these strong bonds in order for reaction to occur
What are free radicals?
Species that posses at least one unpaired electron
What are the reagents and conditions for free radical substitution?
Condition: UV light
Reagents:
- for a large proportion of mono-substituted products, a large excess of hydrocarbon used
- for a large proportion of poly-substituted products, a large excess of halogen used
What is the reactivity of halogens in free radical substitutions (most reactive to least reactive)?
F2 > Cl2 > Br2 > I2
- F2 gives explosive reaction even in absence of UV light
- Cl or Br reaction proceeds rapidly only in UV light
- I2 no reaction under normal lab conditions
What is the stability of hydrocarbon radicals (most stable to least stable) and why?
tertiary radical > secondary radical > primary radical > methyl radical
- alkyl substituents which are electron-donating help stabilize the radical
What other factors can stabilize hydrocarbon radicals?
What factors destabilize hydrocarbon radicals?
What is cracking?
Cracking is a process where bigger hydrocarbon molecules are broken down into smaller molecules
What are the two types of cracking?
What are the pollutants in car exhaust and where do they come from?
What contributes to the formation of photochemical smog?
CO, unburnt hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen
What pollutants contribute to the formation of acid rain?
nitrogen oxides and SO2
What do catalytic convertors do?
Convert harmful gas in exhaust into less harmful gas via the action of catalysts like platinum, rhodium and palladium
What reaction do Pt/Pd catalyse?
What reaction do Rh catalyse?
2NO + 2CO –> 2CO2 + N2
What poisons the catalyst in the catalytic converter?
Lead and Maganese (Pb and Mn)
What gases cause the greenhouse effect?
Carbon dioxide, methane, N2O, halogenoalkanes, ozone, water vapour