Alkanes (Cambridge O Level Chemistry)

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Alkanes: Properties & Bonding

  • Alkanes are a group of saturated hydrocarbons
  • The term saturated means that they only have single carbon-carbon bonds, there are no double bonds
  • The general formula of the alkanes is CnH2n+2
  • They are colourless compounds which have a gradual change in their physical properties as the number of carbon atoms in the chain increases
  • Alkanes are generally unreactive compounds but they do undergo combustion reactions, can be cracked into smaller molecules and can react with halogens in the presence of light in substitution reactions
  • Methane is an alkane and is the major component of natural gas
  • Methane undergoes complete combustion forming carbon dioxide and water:

CH4 (g) + 2O(g) → CO2 (g) + 2H2O (l)

This Table shows the Displayed Formula of the First Four Members of the Alkane Homologous Series

Alkanes - First 4 members 1, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notesAlkanes - First 4 members 1 2, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Substitution Reaction of Alkanes with Halogens

  • In a substitution reaction, one atom (or group of atoms) is swapped with another atom (or group of atoms)
  • Alkanes undergo a substitution reaction with halogens in the presence of ultraviolet radiation (sunlight is a source of UV radiation)
  • This is called a photochemical reaction
  • The UV light provides the activation energy, Ea, for the reaction 
  • A hydrogen atom is replaced with the halogen atom
  • More than one hydrogen atom can be substituted depending on the amount of ultraviolet radiation there is

11-2-2-ethane-and-chlorine

In the presence of ultraviolet (UV) radiation, methane reacts with chlorine to form chloromethane and hydrogen chloride

 

Exam Tip

You need to be able to draw the displayed and structural formulae of the products formed when one halogen atom replaces a hydrogen (also known as monosubstitution) 

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Caroline

Author: Caroline

Caroline graduated from the University of Nottingham with a degree in Chemistry and Molecular Physics. She spent several years working as an Industrial Chemist in the automotive industry before retraining to teach. Caroline has over 12 years of experience teaching GCSE and A-level chemistry and physics. She is passionate about creating high-quality resources to help students achieve their full potential.