This MCQ module is based on: Classification Alkanes
Classification Alkanes
This assessment will be based on: Classification Alkanes
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Classification of Hydrocarbons and Alkanes
9.1 Hydrocarbons — An Introduction
The term 'hydrocarbon' is self-explanatory: it means a compound made up of only carbon and hydrogen. Hydrocarbons are the simplest class of organic compounds and constitute the parent skeleton of every functional class. Petrol, diesel, kerosene, LPG, CNG, polythene, polypropylene, asphalt — all are derived from naturally occurring hydrocarbons (mainly petroleum and natural gas).
The hydrocarbons used in our day-to-day life come from two main natural sources: petroleum (a complex liquid mixture trapped in sedimentary rocks) and natural gas (mostly methane). On heating crude petroleum in oil refineries, fractional distillation separates it into useful fractions — gasoline, kerosene, diesel, lubricating oil and bitumen.
9.2 Classification of Hydrocarbons
Hydrocarbons are of different types. Depending on the types of carbon-carbon bonds present, they are classified into three principal categories:
- Saturated hydrocarbons — only single C–C bonds (alkanes & cycloalkanes)
- Unsaturated hydrocarbons — at least one C=C double or C≡C triple bond (alkenes & alkynes)
- Aromatic hydrocarbons — special class containing benzene-like rings with delocalised π electrons
9.3 Alkanes
Alkanes are saturated open-chain hydrocarbons containing only carbon-carbon single bonds. Methane (CH₄) is the first member of the family; replacing one H of methane by –CH₃ gives ethane (C₂H₆), then propane, butane, and so on. The general molecular formula is CₙH₂ₙ₊₂ where n = 1, 2, 3, … Each carbon atom is sp³ hybridised with tetrahedral geometry (bond angle 109.5°).
9.3.1 Structural Isomerism in Alkanes
Alkanes with four or more carbons exhibit chain isomerism. Both n-butane (straight chain) and isobutane (branched) share C₄H₁₀ but differ in connectivity. C₅H₁₂ has 3 isomers (n-pentane, isopentane, neopentane); C₆H₁₄ has 5 isomers; C₇H₁₆ has 9.
9.3.2 IUPAC Nomenclature of Alkanes
The systematic naming of alkanes follows four IUPAC rules:
- Longest chain: Identify the longest continuous chain of carbons → this gives the parent name (meth-, eth-, prop-, but-, pent-, hex-, hept-, oct-, non-, dec-).
- Lowest locants: Number the chain from the end that gives the substituent(s) the lowest set of locants.
- Substituents alphabetically: Name substituents (ethyl before methyl) and prefix them to the parent name.
- Multiplying prefixes: Use di, tri, tetra for two, three, four identical substituents; these are NOT considered for alphabetisation.
| Structure | IUPAC name | Common name |
|---|---|---|
| CH₃–CH₂–CH₂–CH₂–CH₃ | Pentane | n-Pentane |
| (CH₃)₂CH–CH₂–CH₃ | 2-Methylbutane | Isopentane |
| (CH₃)₄C | 2,2-Dimethylpropane | Neopentane |
| CH₃–CH(C₂H₅)–CH₂–CH₂–CH₃ | 3-Methylhexane | — |
| CH₃–C(CH₃)₂–CH(CH₃)–CH₂–CH₃ | 2,2,3-Trimethylpentane | — |
IUPAC Name Builder
Pick the parent chain length and one substituent position, then read off the IUPAC name in real time.
Computed IUPAC name:
2-methylpentane
Lowest locants applied: numbered from end nearer the substituent.
9.3.3 Preparation of Alkanes
(a) From unsaturated hydrocarbons — Sabatier–Senderens reaction
Catalytic hydrogenation of alkenes/alkynes in the presence of finely divided Ni (or Pt, Pd) at 523–573 K converts them into alkanes:
CH₂=CH₂ + H₂ →Ni/Δ CH₃–CH₃HC≡CH + 2 H₂ →Ni/Δ CH₃–CH₃
(b) From alkyl halides — Wurtz reaction
Alkyl halides (except fluorides) react with sodium metal in dry ether to form symmetrical alkanes containing twice the number of carbons of the alkyl halide:
2 CH₃Br + 2 Na →dry ether CH₃–CH₃ + 2 NaBrLimitation: Wurtz reaction with two different alkyl halides gives a mixture of three alkanes and is therefore not preparatively useful for unsymmetrical alkanes. It also fails to give alkanes containing an odd number of carbon atoms when only one halide is used.
(c) From carboxylic acids — Decarboxylation
Sodium salts of carboxylic acids on heating with soda lime (NaOH + CaO, 3:1) lose CO₂ and give alkane with one carbon less:
CH₃COONa + NaOH →CaO/Δ CH₄ + Na₂CO₃(d) Kolbe's electrolytic method
Electrolysis of an aqueous solution of sodium or potassium salt of carboxylic acid produces alkane at the anode:
2 CH₃COONa + 2 H₂O →electrolysis CH₃–CH₃ + 2 CO₂ + H₂ + 2 NaOH9.3.4 Physical Properties
The first four members (C₁–C₄) are gases, C₅–C₁₇ are liquids and higher members (C₁₈ onwards) are waxy solids at room temperature. They are colourless, odourless and almost insoluble in water (non-polar) but soluble in benzene, ether, CCl₄. Boiling points rise steadily with chain length (about 20–30 K per CH₂), and for chain isomers the b.p. decreases with branching because branched molecules pack less efficiently and have less surface for van-der-Waals contact.
9.3.5 Chemical Reactions
Alkanes are generally inert towards acids, bases and oxidising agents at room temperature, but they undergo:
(i) Substitution — Halogenation
In presence of UV light or at 520–670 K, alkanes react with chlorine or bromine to give haloalkanes (the order of reactivity is F > Cl > Br > I; iodination is reversible and very slow).
CH₄ + Cl₂ →hν CH₃Cl + HCl → CH₂Cl₂ → CHCl₃ → CCl₄Step 1 — Initiation: UV light cleaves Cl–Cl homolytically:
Cl–Cl →hν Cl• + Cl•Step 2 — Propagation (chain-carrying steps):
Cl• + CH₄ → •CH₃ + HCl•CH₃ + Cl₂ → CH₃Cl + Cl•
The Cl• regenerated continues the chain, so a single photon can chlorinate thousands of methane molecules.
Step 3 — Termination (radical–radical combination):
Cl• + Cl• → Cl₂•CH₃ + Cl• → CH₃Cl
•CH₃ + •CH₃ → CH₃–CH₃
(ii) Combustion
Alkanes burn completely in excess of air/oxygen with a non-luminous blue flame to give CO₂ and H₂O along with a large amount of heat:
CH₄ + 2 O₂ → CO₂ + 2 H₂O ΔH = –890 kJ/molC₄H₁₀ + 13/2 O₂ → 4 CO₂ + 5 H₂O ΔH = –2875.84 kJ/mol
This is the basis of LPG, CNG and petrol as fuels. With limited supply of air, incomplete combustion gives carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon (soot) — extremely dangerous in poorly ventilated heaters.
(iii) Controlled oxidation
2 CH₄ + O₂ →Cu/523 K/100 atm 2 CH₃OHCH₄ + O₂ →Mo₂O₃ HCHO + H₂O
(iv) Isomerisation, Aromatisation and Pyrolysis
n-Hexane on heating with anhydrous AlCl₃/HCl rearranges to its branched isomers (isomerisation). On passing over Pt/V₂O₅ supported on Al₂O₃ at 773 K, n-hexane cyclises and dehydrogenates to give benzene (aromatisation or reforming). Higher alkanes on strong heating in the absence of air decompose into smaller alkanes, alkenes and H₂ (pyrolysis or cracking) — the basis of refinery cracking.
CH₃–(CH₂)₄–CH₃ →Pt/Al₂O₃, 773 K C₆H₆ + 4 H₂9.3.6 Conformations
Rotation about a C–C single bond is possible because the σ bond is cylindrically symmetric. Different spatial arrangements arising from such rotation are called conformations (or conformers / rotamers). For ethane, two extreme conformations are noteworthy:
- Staggered — the H atoms on adjacent carbons are as far apart as possible (dihedral angle 60°). Lowest energy, most stable.
- Eclipsed — the H atoms on adjacent carbons directly overlap (dihedral angle 0°). Higher energy by ~12.5 kJ/mol due to torsional strain.
Conformations are best represented by Newman projections — a view down the C–C axis. The front carbon is shown as a dot at the centre with three bonds at 120°; the back carbon is the surrounding circle with three bonds.
Conformation Energy Explorer
Drag the slider to rotate the back carbon of ethane and watch the potential energy curve change.
Staggered — Energy: 0 kJ/mol
Setup: A teacher models n-butane and twists the central C2–C3 bond. Four conformations appear at dihedral angles 0°, 60°, 120°, 180°.
For n-butane, four key conformations arise on rotation about the C2–C3 bond:
- Anti (180°) — two methyl groups on opposite sides; most stable.
- Gauche (60°/300°) — methyl groups 60° apart, slight steric strain (3.8 kJ/mol higher than anti).
- Eclipsed (120°/240°) — methyl eclipses H, ~16 kJ/mol higher.
- Fully eclipsed (0°) — methyl eclipses methyl; least stable (~19 kJ/mol higher than anti).
Reason: Strain order = torsional + steric. Anti minimises both; fully eclipsed maximises both.
Worked Example 1: IUPAC Naming
Write the IUPAC name of the alkane: (CH₃)₃C–CH₂–CH(CH₃)–CH₂–CH₃
Step 2: Number to give lowest locants. Numbering from the (CH₃)₃C end: C1 = CH₃ (one of the three), C2 = C(CH₃)₂ (with two methyl substituents at C2), C3 = CH₂, C4 = CH(CH₃), C5 = CH₂, C6 = CH₃. Substituent locants: 2,2,4. From the other end they would be 3,5,5,5 — much higher.
Step 3: Substituents: three methyl groups at 2, 2, 4.
Name: 2,2,4-Trimethylhexane.
Worked Example 2: Halogenation Mechanism
Write the three steps of the free-radical mechanism for the monochlorination of ethane (C₂H₆ + Cl₂ → C₂H₅Cl + HCl).
Cl–Cl →hν Cl• + Cl•
Propagation (the chain-carrying steps):
Cl• + CH₃–CH₃ → •CH₂–CH₃ + HCl
•CH₂–CH₃ + Cl–Cl → CH₃–CH₂Cl + Cl•
The Cl• regenerated re-enters the cycle so one initiation event yields many product molecules.
Termination (radicals combine, ending the chain):
Cl• + Cl• → Cl₂
•CH₂–CH₃ + Cl• → CH₃CH₂Cl
•CH₂–CH₃ + •CH₂–CH₃ → CH₃–CH₂–CH₂–CH₃ (n-butane!)
Worked Example 3: Wurtz Reaction
Predict the product(s) of the Wurtz reaction of (a) bromoethane alone, (b) bromomethane + bromoethane.
2 CH₃CH₂Br + 2 Na → CH₃CH₂–CH₂CH₃ + 2 NaBr → n-butane.
(b) A mixture of bromomethane and bromoethane gives THREE alkanes (statistical mixture):
CH₃Br + CH₃Br → CH₃–CH₃ (ethane)
CH₃Br + C₂H₅Br → CH₃–C₂H₅ (propane)
C₂H₅Br + C₂H₅Br → C₂H₅–C₂H₅ (n-butane)
This is why Wurtz reaction is unsuitable for synthesising unsymmetrical alkanes.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. Which of the following is NOT a saturated hydrocarbon? L1 Remember
Q2. Explain why neopentane (2,2-dimethylpropane) has a lower boiling point than n-pentane although both have the formula C₅H₁₂. L4 Analyse
Q3. Write the IUPAC name of (CH₃)₂CH–CH₂–CH(C₂H₅)–CH₃ L3 Apply
Q4. The chlorination of n-butane gives a mixture of 1-chlorobutane and 2-chlorobutane. Predict which is the major product and justify. L5 Evaluate
Q5. HOT (Create): Design a complete synthetic route from acetic acid to n-butane using only standard alkane preparations. L6 Create
Step 1: Decarboxylation: CH₃COONa + NaOH/CaO → CH₄ (methane).
Step 2: Halogenation: CH₄ + Cl₂/hν → CH₃Cl.
Step 3: Conversion to ethyl halide via doubling first: 2 CH₃Cl + 2 Na (Wurtz) → CH₃–CH₃ (ethane). Halogenate: C₂H₆ + Cl₂/hν → C₂H₅Cl.
Step 4: Wurtz again: 2 C₂H₅Cl + 2 Na → CH₃CH₂CH₂CH₃ (n-butane).
Alternative single step: 2 C₂H₅Br + 2 Na → n-butane (if ethyl halide is already available). The route demonstrates how decarboxylation, halogenation and Wurtz coupling complement one another.
Assertion–Reason Questions
Choose: (A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R doesn't explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: Staggered conformation of ethane is more stable than eclipsed.
R: In the staggered form the C–H bond pairs of adjacent carbons are 60° apart, minimising electron-pair repulsion.
A: Wurtz reaction is preferred for synthesising symmetrical alkanes only.
R: When two different alkyl halides are used, a statistical mixture of three alkanes is obtained, which is difficult to separate.
A: Iodination of methane with I₂/hν is a useful synthesis of CH₃I.
R: Iodination is reversible because HI formed is a strong reducing agent that converts CH₃I back to CH₄.