Syllabus
Preparation, properties and reactions of alkenes:
Preparation of alkenes by elimination reactions;
Physical properties: boiling points, density and dipole moments
Acidity;
Acid catalysed hydration of alkenes(excluding the stereochemistry of addition and elimination);
Reactions of alkenes with KMnO4 and
Reactions of alkenes with ozone;
Reduction of alkenes;
Electrophilic addition reactions of alkenes with X2, HX, HOX and H2O (X=halogen);
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Introduction
Alkenes are unsaturated hydrocarbons having carbon-carbon double bond(C=C) in their molecules.
Their general formula is C-nH-2n.
The simplest alkene is ethene, C-2H-4
Methods of Preparation
1. Dehydrohalogenation of alkyl halides.
2. Dehydration of alcohols
3. Dehalogenation of vicinal dihalides
Physical properties
State: Ethene, propene and butene are gases at room temperature. From pentene onwards till alkenes having 18 carbon atoms, they are liquids. Still higher members of the family are solids.
Addition of water
water adds to alkenes in the presence of mineral acids. Hence it is termed catalytic hydration of alkenes. Addition occurs in accordance with Markownikov's rule. We get alcohols from this addition.
Oxidation with potassium permanganate (specially mentioned in syllabus)
Alkenes react with cold dilute potassium permanganate solution(alkaline) to form 1,2-diols called glycols. The glycols contain two -OH groups on adjacent carbon atoms.
Reaction with ozone
Ozone, O3, is an allotrope of oxygen that adds rapidly to carbon-carbon double bonds. Since the overall change in ozonolysis is more complex than a simple addition reaction, its mechanism has been extensively studied. Reactive intermediates called ozonides have been isolated from the interaction of ozone with alkenes, and these unstable compounds may be converted to stable products by either a reductive workup (Zn dust in water or alcohol) or an oxidative workup (hydrogen peroxide).
Reduction
Addition of hydrogen to a carbon-carbon double bond is called hydrogenation. The overall effect of such an addition is the reductive removal of the double bond functional group.
Polymerisation
-- polymerisation of ethene
-- polymerisation of vinyl chloride
-- polymerisation of styrene
Addition of hydrogen to a carbon-carbon double bond is called hydrogenation. The overall effect of such an addition is the reductive removal of the double bond functional group.
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