Ch 11: Organic Compounds - Alkanes
Saturated hydrocarbon
A hydrocarbon in which all the bonds between carbon atoms are single bonds
Alkanes can be represented by the formula
C(n)H(2n+2)
Hydrocarbon
Compounds composed of only carbon and hydrogen
Structural isomers
Compounds that have the same molecular formula but differ in the covalent arrangements of their atoms.
Expanded structural formulas show
all covalent bonds
Cycloalkanes
are alkanes in which the carbon atoms form a ring
The properties of organic and inorganic compounds often differ, largely as a result of
bonding differences
Organic compounds contain
carbon
Large numbers of organic compounds are possible because
carbon atoms link to form chains and networks
Organic chemistry is the study of
carbon-containing compounds
All organic compounds are grouped into classes based on
characteristic features called functional groups
Alkanes are relatively unreactive and remain unchanged by most reagents. The reaction that is most significant is
combusion
Isomers are
compounds that have the same molecular formula but different arrangements of atoms
Rotation about the single bonds between carbon atoms allows alkanes to exist in many different
conformations
Organic compounds contain primarily
covalent bonds
However, the only cycloalkane that is actually planar is
cycloprane
Branched isomers
don't have straight chains
Because rotation about the single bonds in the ring is restricted, certain distributed cycloalkanes can exist as
geometric (cis-trans) isomers
Alkyl groups
groups of atoms that are formed when one hydrogen atom is removed from an alkane molecule
Normal alkanes
have straight chains
Alkanes are
hydrocarbons that contain only single covalent bonds
In organic compounds,
ionic bonding is more prevalent
Another reason organic compounds are prevalent is because of
isomerism
Condensed structural formulas show
no covalent bonds or only selected bonds
Inorganic chemistry is the study of the elements and all
noncarbon elements
The physical properties of alkanes are typical of all hydrocarbons:
nonpolar, insoluble in water, less dense than water, and increasing melting and boiling points with increasing molecular weight
The carbon atom rings of cycloalkanes are usually shown as
planar
Alkanes possess a 3D geometry in which each carbon is
surrounded by four bonds directed to the corners of a tetrahedron
Compounds with their functional groups are represented by
two types of structural formulas