サインイン

The low reactivity in alkanes can be attributed to the non-polar nature of C–C and C–H σ bonds. Alkanes, therefore, were initially termed as “paraffins,” derived from the Latin words: parum, meaning “too little,” and affinis, meaning “affinity.”

Alkanes undergo combustion in the presence of excess oxygen and high-temperature conditions to give carbon dioxide and water. A combustion reaction is the energy source in natural gas, liquified petroleum gas (LPG), fuel oil, gasoline, diesel fuel, and aviation fuel. The energy released during combustion, called the heat of combustion (−ΔH°), helps predict the relative stabilities in alkanes and cycloalkanes.

For straight-chain alkanes, the heat of combustion increases gradually with the sequential addition of a CH2 group. However, in higher alkanes, the heat of combustion decreases with increased branching, suggesting that branched isomers have lower potential energies and have greater stabilities compared to straight chain (linear) alkanes.

In cycloalkanes, the relative stability depends on the strain energy, which is the combined outcome of angular, torsional, and steric strains. The strain energy is determined as the difference between the actual and the predicted heats of combustion. A study of strain energy as a function of ring size reveals that the smallest cycloalkane (C3) exhibits maximum strain due to excessive compression of its bond angles. As the ring size increases, the bond angles approach the ideal value of 109° with cyclohexane (C6) being strain-free. Further strains in higher cycloalkanes (C7 to C9) result from their non-ideal bond angles.

タグ
Combustion EnergyStabilityAlkanesCycloalkanesReactivityNon polar NatureC C BondsC H BondsParaffinsAffinityCombustion ReactionCarbon DioxideWaterHeat Of CombustionRelative StabilitiesStraight chain AlkanesBranchingBranched IsomersPotential EnergiesCycloalkane StabilityStrain EnergyAngular StrainTorsional StrainSteric Strain

章から 3:

article

Now Playing

3.14 : Combustion Energy: A Measure of Stability in Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

6.1K 閲覧数

article

3.1 : Structure of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

26.0K 閲覧数

article

3.2 : Constitutional Isomers of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

17.2K 閲覧数

article

3.3 : Nomenclature of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

20.4K 閲覧数

article

3.4 : Physical Properties of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

10.5K 閲覧数

article

3.5 : Newman Projections

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

15.6K 閲覧数

article

3.6 : Conformations of Ethane and Propane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

13.2K 閲覧数

article

3.7 : Conformations of Butane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

13.3K 閲覧数

article

3.8 : Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.7K 閲覧数

article

3.9 : Conformations of Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.2K 閲覧数

article

3.10 : Conformations of Cyclohexane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.5K 閲覧数

article

3.11 : Chair Conformation of Cyclohexane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

13.8K 閲覧数

article

3.12 : Stability of Substituted Cyclohexanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

12.0K 閲覧数

article

3.13 : Disubstituted Cyclohexanes: cis-trans Isomerism

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.4K 閲覧数

JoVE Logo

個人情報保護方針

利用規約

一般データ保護規則

研究

教育

JoVEについて

Copyright © 2023 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved