English
Noun
- any cycloalkane
(or alkyl derivative)
Usage notes
- Used principally in the petrochemical industry
Cycloalkanes (also called naphthenes, especially
if from
petroleum
sources) are types of
alkanes which have one or more
rings of
carbon atoms in the
chemical
structure of their
molecules. Alkanes are types of
organic
hydrocarbon compounds
which have only single
chemical
bonds in their chemical structure. Cycloalkanes consist of only
carbon (C) and
hydrogen
(H) atoms and are saturated because there are no multiple C-C bonds
to
hydrogenate
(add more hydrogen to). A general
chemical
formula for cycloalkanes would be CnH2(n+1-g) where n = number
of C atoms and g = number of rings in the molecule.
Cycloalkanes with a single ring are named analogously to their
normal
alkane counterpart
of the same carbon count:
cyclopropane,
cyclobutane,
cyclopentane,
cyclohexane, etc. The larger
cycloalkanes, with greater than 20 carbon atoms are typically
called cycloparaffins.
Cycloalkanes are classified into small, normal
and bigger cycloalkanes, where cyclopropane and cyclobutane are the
small ones, cyclopentane, cyclohexane, cycloheptane are the normal
ones, and the rest are the bigger ones.
Nomenclature
- See also: IUPAC
nomenclature
The naming of polycyclic alkanes such as
bicyclic alkanes and
spiro
alkanes is more complex, with the base name indicating the number
of carbons in the ring system, a prefix indicating the number of
rings (e.g., "bicyclo"), and a numeric prefix before that
indicating the number of carbons in each part of each ring,
exclusive of vertices. For instance, a bicyclooctane that consists
of a six-member ring and a four-member ring, which share two
adjacent carbon atoms that form a shared edge, is
[4.2.0]-bicyclooctane. That part of the six-member ring, exclusive
of the shared edge has 4 carbons. That part of the four-member
ring, exclusive of the shared edge, has 2 carbons. The edge itself,
exclusive of the two vertices that define it, has 0 carbons.
The group of cycloalkanes are also known as
naphthenes, as they are compounds of
petroleum or
naphtha.
Properties
Cycloalkanes are similar to alkanes in their
general physical properties, but they have higher
boiling
points,
melting
points, and
densities than alkanes. This is
due to stronger
London
forces because the ring shape allows for a larger area of
contact. Cycloalkanes exhibit almost the same degree of
unreactivity as alkanes, due to their containing only unreactive
C-C and C-H bonds; however, the ring strain (see below) can cause
cycloalkanes to be more reactive.
Ring strain
The carbon atoms in cycloalkanes are sp3
hybridized
and are therefore a deviation from the ideal tetrahedral bond
angles of 109.47 degrees. This causes an increase in potential
energy and an overall destabilizing effect. Eclipsing of hydrogen
atoms is an important destabilizing effect, as well. The strain
energy of a cycloalkane is the theoretical increase in energy
caused by the compound's geometry, and is calculated by comparing
the experimental
standard enthalpy change of combustion of the cycloalkane with
the value calculated using
average
bond energies.
Ring strain is highest for
cyclopropane, in which the
carbon atoms form a triangle and therefore have 60 degree C-C-C
bond angles. There are also three pairs of eclipsed hydrogens. The
ring strain is calculated to be around 120 kJ/mol.
Cyclobutane has
the carbon atoms in a puckered square with approximately 90-degree
bond angles; "puckering" reduces the eclipsing interactions between
hydrogen atoms. Its ring strain is therefore slightly less, at
around 110 kJ/mol.
For a theoretical planar
cyclopentane the C-C-C bond
angles would be 108 degrees, very close to the measure of the
tetrahedral angle. Actual cyclopentane molecules are puckered, but
this changes only the bond angles slightly so that angle strain is
relatively small. The eclipsing interactions are also reduced,
leaving a ring strain of about 25 kJ/mol.
In
cyclohexane the ring strain
and eclipsing interactions are negligible because the puckering of
the ring allows ideal tetrahedral bond angles to be achieved. As
well, in the most stable chair form of cyclohexane, axial hydrogens
on adjacent carbon atoms are pointed in opposite directions,
virtually eliminating eclipsing strain.
After cyclohexane, the molecules are unable to
take a structure with no ring strain, resulting in an increase in
strain energy, which peaks at 9 carbons (around 50 kJ/mol). After
that, strain energy slowly decreases until 12 carbon atoms, where
it drops significantly; at 14, another significant drop occurs and
the strain is on a level comparable with 10 kJ/mol. After 14 carbon
atoms, sources disagree on what happens to ring strain, some
indicating that it increases steadily, others saying that it
disappears entirely.
Reactions
The simple and the bigger cycloalkanes are very
stable, like
alkanes,
and their reactions, for example,
radical
chain reactions, are like alkanes.
The small cycloalkanes - particularly
cyclopropane - have a lower stability due to
Baeyer
strain and
ring strain.
They react similarly to
alkenes, though they do not
react in
electrophilic
addition, but in
nucleophilic aliphatic substitution. These reactions are
ring-opening reactions or ring-cleavage reactions of
alkyl
cycloalkanes. Cycloalkanes can be formed in a
Diels-Alder
reaction followed by a
catalytic
hydrogenation.
References
External links
naphthene in Czech: Cykloalkany
naphthene in German: Cycloalkane
naphthene in Modern Greek (1453-):
Κυκλοαλκάνια
naphthene in Spanish: Cicloalcano
naphthene in French: Cycloalcane
naphthene in Korean: 사이클로알케인
naphthene in Croatian: Cikloalkani
naphthene in Italian: Cicloalcani
naphthene in Lithuanian: Cikloalkanai
naphthene in Macedonian: Циклоалкан
naphthene in Dutch: Cycloalkaan
naphthene in Japanese: シクロアルカン
naphthene in Norwegian: Sykloalkan
naphthene in Polish: Cykloalkany
naphthene in Portuguese: Cicloalcano
naphthene in Russian: Циклоалканы
naphthene in Serbian: Циклоалкан
naphthene in Finnish: Sykloalkaani
naphthene in Swedish: Cykloalkan
naphthene in Vietnamese: Cycloankan
naphthene in Ukrainian: Циклоалкани
naphthene in Chinese: 环烷烃