Blood Components, Types, Circulation
20 cartesThis note covers the components and types of blood (ABO/Rh systems), and how blood circulates through the human body.
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Alkanes (CnH2n+2)
Alkanes: Hydrocarbons with only single carbon-carbon bonds.
- General Formula: CH
- Carbon atoms exhibit sp3 hybridization.
- Form a homologous series:
- Differ by a CH group.
- Same general formula and functional group.
- Similar chemical properties.
- Gradual change in physical properties (e.g., molar mass, melting/boiling points, density).
Key Properties of Alkanes
- First 10 straight-chained alkanes (e.g., methane, ethane, propane, butane, pentane, hexane, heptane, octane, nonane, decane).
- Derived from crude oil via fractional distillation and cracking.
- Cracking converts longer chains to shorter, more valuable ones.
- Catalytic cracking: ~500°C with catalysts.
- Thermal cracking: ~800°C without catalysts.
- Cracking converts longer chains to shorter, more valuable ones.
- Different formula representations: Molecular, condensed, structural.
Nomenclature (Naming) of Alkanes
IUPAC system:Standardized naming for global scientific communication.
- Unbranched alkanes: Latin prefix for carbon count + -ane suffix.
- Example: Meth-ane, eth-ane.
- Substituent Alkyl Groups:
- Formed by removing one H from an alkane.
- General formula: CH.
- Suffix changes from -ane to -yl.
- Example: Methane (CH) becomes meth-yl (-CH).
- Represented by "R".
Rules for Naming Branched Chain Alkanes
- Longest continuous carbon skeleton is the parent chain.
- Groups/atoms outside the skeleton are substituents.
- Number carbon atoms to give substituents the lowest possible numbers.
- Substituents arelisted in alphabetical order.
- Number and name are separated by a hyphen (-).
- If two different substituents have equal positions from opposite sides, prioritize by alphabetical order.
- Multiple identical substituents use Latinprefixes (di-, tri-, tetra-, etc.) and comma-separated numbers.
- Ignore di-, tri- for alphabetical ordering; iso-, neo- are considered.
Common Names of Alkanes
- n-: No branching (normal).
- iso-: One methyl group on the second carbon. (e.g., isobutane).
- neo-: Two methyl groups on the second carbon. (e.g., neopentane).
Isomerism in Alkanes
Isomers: Compounds with the same chemical formula but different arrangements.
- Chain isomerism: Straight vs. branched chains.
- Alkanes with >3 carbons show chain isomerism (e.g., butane has 2 isomers).
Physical Properties of Alkanes
- Colourless and odourless.
- Gases: 1-4 carbon atoms.
- Liquids: 5-17 carbon atoms.
- Solids: 18+ carbon atoms.
- Melting/boiling points increase with chain length.
- Nonpolar molecules:Insoluble in water, soluble in organic solvents.
- Lower density than water, so they float.
Chemical Properties of Alkanes
- Undergo combustion with oxygen: Alkane + O → CO + HO + energy.
- Complete combustion: Excess O → CO + HO.
- Incomplete combustion: Limited O → CO +HO or C (soot) + HO.
- Do not undergo addition reactions (due to single bonds).
- Undergo substitution reactions with halogens under UV light (free radical substitution).
Uses of Alkanes
- Natural gas: Primarily 1-4 carbon alkanes.
- Gasoline and kerosene: Liquid alkanes.
- Paraffin wax (solid alkanes): Candles, anti-corrosive agents, lubricating oil.
- Higher alkanes are cracked for various uses.
Synthesis of Alkanes
- Hydrogenation of Alkenes: Add H acrossdouble bond using Pd, Pt, or Ni catalyst.
- Wurtz Synthesis: Couple haloalkanes using sodium metal in dry ether.
- Grignard Synthesis: React Grignard reagent (alkyl halide + Mg) with water.
Methane (CH4)
- Physical properties: Colourless, odourless, non-poisonous gas. Nonpolar. Insoluble in water, soluble in ether/alcohol. Very low melting/boiling point.
- Chemical properties:Main component of natural gas. Powerful greenhouse gas (holds 20x more heat than CO). Emitted from anaerobic environments.
- Uses: Fuel (automobiles, ovens, water heaters), electricity generation, antifreeze, fertilizers, sanitizing products.
- Natural Gas Leakage: Natural gas (mainly methane) is odourless; mercaptan is added for detection (rotten egg smell). Leaks reduce available oxygen, causing symptoms like headache, dizziness, nausea.
Alkynes (CnH2n-2)
Alkynes: Unsaturated hydrocarbons with a carbon-carbon triple bond.
- General Formula: CH.
- Carbon atoms in triple bond exhibit sp hybridization.
- Have two fewer hydrogen atoms than corresponding alkenes.
Nomenclature (Naming) of Alkynes
- Similar to alkanes/alkenes: -ane suffix replaced by -yne.
- Example: Eth-yne, prop-yne.
- Parent chain: Longest carbon chain containing the triple bond.
- Multiple triple bonds: Specify positions and use suffixes like diyne, triyne.
- Priority:If double and triple bonds are equidistant, the double bond gets the smallest number.
Isomerism in Alkynes
- No geometric isomerism (due to linear shape).
- Have structural isomers (chain, position, functional).
- First two members (ethyne, propyne) have only one structure.
Structural Isomerism in Alkynes
- Chain Isomerism: Straight vs. branched chains (e.g., 1-pentyne and 2-methyl-1-butyne).
- Position Isomerism: Different positions of the triple bond (e.g., 1-pentyne and 2-pentyne).
- Functional Isomerism: Alkynes and alkadienes with the same number of carbonatoms.
Physical Properties of Alkynes
- Homologous series.
- Insoluble in polar solvents (water), soluble in organic solvents.
- Smaller alkynes are gases with low melting/boiling points.
- Slightly higher boiling points than alkanes and alkenes.
Reactions of Alkynes
- Combustion: Produce CO and HO, releasing heat.
- Acetylene (ethyne): Used in metal cutting (acetylene torch) due to high heat release.
- Hydrogenation: Convert to alkenes/alkanes in presence of catalysts.
- To alkanes: Add twoH molecules with Pt catalyst.
- To alkenes: Add one H molecule with Lindlar's catalyst.
- Addition of Hydrogen Halides and Halogens: Forms halogenoalkenes andhalogenoalkanes (e.g., addition of HCl to acetylene gives chloroethene).
- Addition of Water: In presence of acid, produces an enol (alkene with hydroxyl group).
- Dimerization of Acetylene: Forms vinyl acetylene (used in artificial rubber).
- Synthesis of Benzene: Acetylene molecules react at ~400°C with catalysts.
Synthesis of Alkynes
- Synthesis of Acetylene:From limestone, coal, and water in industry (limestone → quicklime (CaO), quicklime + coal → calcium carbide (CaC), CaC + HO → acetylene).
- Dehydrohalogenation of Dihalogenoalkanes: Alkynes formed by eliminating two HX molecules using strong bases (e.g., alkoxide bases) at high temperatures.
Importance and Uses of Alkynes
- Acetylene (ethyne): Important industrial starting material.
- Rocket fuel.
- Synthesis of organic compounds (ethanoic acid, acrylic acid, ethanol).
- Organic solvents.
- Starting material for polymers (e.g., polyethylene plastics, neoprene).
- Welding andcutting (hottest flame at 3500°C).
Alkenes (CnH2n)
Alkenes: Unsaturated hydrocarbons with a carbon-carbon double bond.
- General Formula: CH.
- Carbon atoms forming double bond exhibit sp2 hybridization.
- More reactive than alkanes due to double bond.
- Can be converted to alkanesby hydrogenation.
- Multiple double bonds: alkadienes (2 double bonds), alkatrienes (3 double bonds).
Nomenclature (Naming) of Alkenes
- Similar toalkanes: -ane suffix replaced by -ene.
- Example: Eth-ene, prop-ene.
- Alkenyl group: Formed by removing 1 H atom (e.g., ethenyl, 2-propenyl).
IUPAC Naming of Alkenes
- Longest carbon chain containing the double bond is the parent chain. Suffix is -ene.
- Number carbons starting from the end closest to the double bond.
- If double bond is equidistant, start from end closest to substituent.
- Specify positions and number of substituents in alphabetical order.
- Use diene, triene for multiple double bonds.
Isomerism in Alkenes
- Show structural isomerism (chain, position, functional).
- Show stereoisomerism (geometric isomerism / cis-trans isomerism).
Structural Isomerism in Alkenes
- Chain Isomerism: Straight vs. branched chains (e.g., 1-buteneand 2-methylpropene).
- Position Isomerism: Different positions of the double bond (e.g., 1-pentene and 2-pentene).
- Functional Isomerism: Alkenes and cycloalkanes with thesame number of carbon atoms.
Stereoisomerism in Alkenes: Geometric Isomerism (cis-trans isomerism)
Restricted rotation around the double bond leads to cis-trans isomers.
- Cis isomer: Groups on the same side of the double bond.
- Trans isomer: Groups on opposite sides of the double bond.
- No cis-trans isomerism if:
- 3 identical groups attached to double bond carbons.
- Same groups attached to one of the double bond carbons.
Physical Properties of Alkenes
- Homologous series.
- Nonpolar, insolublein water, soluble in organic solvents.
- Less dense than water.
- Gases: 4 or fewer carbon atoms.
- Liquids: 5-17 carbon atoms.
- Solids: >17 carbon atoms.
- Lower melting/boiling points than corresponding alkanes.
Reactions of Alkenes
More reactive than alkanes; undergo addition reactions.
- Hydrogenation: Addition of H across double bond with Pt, Pd, or Ni catalysts, forming saturated alkane. (Exothermic)
- Halogenation: Addition of Cl or Br across double bond,forming dihalide. (Iodine too slow; Fluorine too vigorous).
- Addition of Hydrogen Halides (H-X): Produces alkyl halide.
- For unsymmetrical alkenes, regioselectivity is important (which carbon gets H vs. X).
- Addition of Water (Hydration): In presence of strong acid catalyst, forms alcohols.
- Oxidation: Increase C-O bonds, decrease C-H bonds.
- Syn 1,2-Dihydroxylation: Forms 1,2-diol (hydroxy groups added on same side) using OsO or KMnO.
- Ozonolysis: With ozone at -78°C, followed by reduction, oxidizesalkenes into aldehydes or ketones.
- Polymerization: Addition polymerization of monomers to form polymers (e.g., ethene to polyethene).
Synthesis of Alkenes
- Dehydrohalogenation of Alkyl Halides: Elimination reaction (1,2-elimination) using strong bases (e.g., NaOH, KOH) with heating. 2. Dehydration of Alcohols: Elimination of water from alcohol by heating withstrong acid (e.g., HSO, HPO) at high temperatures.
Importance and Uses of Alkenes
- Ethylene: Plant hormone for fruit ripening (commercial use for bananas, tomatoes).
- -carotene: Vitamin A source, polyalkene with 11 double bonds.
- Starting materials for polymers (e.g., ethylchloride, ethanol, polyethylene).
- Artificial polymers: Polyethylene (PE), polyvinyl chloride(PVC), polystyrene, polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon) are derived from alkenes or their derivatives.
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