AQA Chemistry Unit 2: 15 Alkenes
Information of problems with plastics is on a separate document :)
Hope this is helpful
4.0 / 5 based on 3 ratings
- Created by: Beth Evans
- Created on: 30-03-13 18:19
15.1 Alkenes
Alkenes are unsaturated hydrocarbons
- Made only of Carbon and Hydrogen
- They have one or more Carbon Double Bonds
- The double bond makes the molecule more reactive then alkanes
- The general formula: CnH2n
Shape of Alkenes
- Ethene is a planar molecule so its angles between each bond is 120 degree
- There is no rotation around the double bond
- There is no rotation due to the pi bond formed from the cloud of electron density above and below the single bond
1 of 10
Alkenes Cont
Isomers
- Alkenes with more than 3 carbons can form different isomers
- Two types of isomers can be formed involving the double bond:
- Position Isomers
- Geometrical Isomers
- Position isomers are where the double bond is positioned differently
- Geometrical isomers are a form of stereoisomerism, they stereoisomers have the same structural formula but different bonds are arranged differently, it occurs around the double bond
- When two types of the same group e.g. -CH3 are on the same side of a double bond this is called Z and when the groups are on opposite sides this called E
- When atoms of higher atomic number are on the same side this is Z
- When atoms of higher atomic number are opposite sides this is E
2 of 10
Alkenes Cont
Physical Properties
- Van der Waals are the only intermolecular forces acting between alkene molecules
- Physical properties are similar to alkanes
- The melting and boiling point increase with the number of carbon atom
- Alkenes are not soluble in water as they are non-polar
How Alkenes React
- The bond enthaply for a C=C bond is almost double of a C-C bond
- Alkenes are more reactive than alkanes
- C=C forms an electron rich area in a molecule which can be easily attacked by a positively charged reagent called an electrophile
- Electrophiles are electron pair acceptors such as H+
- The reaction is known as electrophilic addition
3 of 10
15.2 Reactions of Alkenes
- Alkenes can burn in air to form CO2 and H2O
Electrophilic Addition Reaction
- The four electrons in the C=C bond make an alkene a centre of high electron density
- Electrophiles are attracted to it and form a bond by using 2 of its 4 electrons in the C=C bond
- The Mechanism:
- Electrophile is attracted to the double bond
- Electrophiles are positively charged and accept a pair of electrons from the double bond
- A positive ion (carbocation) is formed
- A negatively charged ion forms a bond with the carbocation
4 of 10
Reaction with Hydrogen Halides
Reaction with Hydrogen Halides
- Form a haloalkane
- In a hydrogen halide the halogen is more electronegative
- The electrophile is the H delta plus
- The H is attracted to the C=C due to its high electron density
- One of the Carbons bonds with the hydrogen to form a carbocation
- The electrons in the H-Halogen bond are drawn towards the halogen
- The bond in the H-Halogen breaks heterolytically so both electrons go to the halogen since it is more elctronegative
- The Halogen ion then attaches to the positively charged carbon of the carbocation forming a bond with one of its electron pairs
5 of 10
Reactions of Asymmetrical Alkenes
Asymmetrical Alkenes
- When a double bond isn't exactly in the middle of the chain there are more than one possible product
- Some alkyl groups have a tendency to release electrons this is positive inductive effect
- The electron releasing effect tends to stabilise the positive charge of the carbocation
- The more alkyl groups the more stable the carbocation
- This means that a tertiary carbocation is more stable to a primary carbocation
6 of 10
Reactions of Alkenes with Halogens
Reaction of Alkenes with Halogens
- Alkenes react rapidly with chlorine gas, or solutions of bromine and iodine
- A dihaloalkane is formed
- The halogen acts as an electrophile as it has an instantaneous dipole
- The delta positive end attracts to the carbon double bond of the alkene
- The electrons in the double bond repel the electrons of the Br-Br bond which strengthens the dipole of the bromine molecule
- One of the bromine ions joins with a carbon from the double bond leaving a carbocation
- The Br- ion that is now formed then joins to the carbocation forming the dihaloalkane
The Addition takes place in two steps:
- The formation of the carbocation by electrophilic substitution
- Rapid reaction with a negative ion
7 of 10
Reaction with Concentrated Sulfuric Acid
Test for a Double Bond
- Add a few drops of bromine solution and with a double bond it will decolourise from red
Reaction with Concentrated Sulfuric Acid
- Reaction occurs at room temperature and is exothermic
- The electrophile is the partially positively charged hydrogen atom from the sulfuric acid
- The sulfuric acid molecule: H-OSO3H
- The carbocation formed then reacts rapidly with the negatively charged hydrogensulfate ion
Addition of Water
- When water is added an alcohol is formed alongside sulfuric acid
8 of 10
Reaction with Water
- When an alkene reacts with steam it forms an alcohol
- A suitable temperature and pressure is used
- An acid catalyst such as phosphoric acid is used
9 of 10
15.3 Polymerisation of Alkenes
Additional Polymerisation
- Alkenes can polymerise, joining together to from a long chain with high relative molecular masses
- Ethene is a monomer that can form Poly(ethene)
- This reaction is additional polymerisation
- The polymer is an alkane so is unreactive
The Repeating Unit
- The smallest group of atoms that produce the polymer when repeated over and over
- In polyethene the repeating unit is CH2CH2
- Different forms of poly(ethene) can be made depending on the conditions of temperature, pressure and catalyst
- The forms differ in chain length and branching
10 of 10
Similar Chemistry resources:
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
Comments
No comments have yet been made