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7.6: Stability of Alkenes

  • Page ID
    182932
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    Learning Objective

    • use heats of hydrogenation to compare the stabilities of alkenes

    Heats of Hydrogenation

    The stability of an alkene can be determined by measuring the amount of energy associated with the hydrogenation of the molecule. Since the double bond is breaking in this reaction, the energy released in hydrogenation is proportional to the energy in the double bond of the molecule. This is a useful tool because heats of hydrogenation can be measured very accurately. The \(\Delta H^o\) is usually around -30 kcal/mol for alkenes. Stability is simply a measure of energy. Lower energy molecules are more stable than higher energy molecules. More substituted alkenes are more stable than less substituted ones due to hyperconjugation. They have a lower heat of hydrogenation. The following illustrates stability of alkenes with various substituents:

    deigram13.jpg

    In disubstituted alkenes, trans isomers are more stable than cis isomers due to steric hindrance. Also, internal alkenes are more stable than terminal ones. See the following isomers of butene:

    butene.jpg

    image.jpg
    Figure 7.6.3: Trans-2-butene is the most stable because it has the lowest heat of hydrogenation.

    In cycloalkenes smaller than cyclooctene, the cis isomers are more stable than the trans as a result of ring strain.

    Exercises

    1. When looking at their heats of hydrogenation, is the cis or the trans isomer generally more stable?
    2. Arrange the following alkenes in order of increasing stability: 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene; trans-2-hexene; 2-methyl-2-pentene; cis-2-hexene
    3. Which is the more stable alkene in each pair?

    Answer

    1. Trans alkenes are more stable as demonstrated by the lower heats of hydrogenation when compared to their cis-isomers.

    2. (least substituted and cis) cis-2-hexene < trans-2-hexene < 2-methyl-2-pentene < 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene (most substituted)

    3. A) 2 b/c trans with same substitution at C=C B) 1 b/c the C=C is more substituted

    References

    1. Fox, Marye Anne, and James K. Whitesell. Organic Chemistry. 3rd ed. Sudbury, MA: Janes and Bartlett Publishers, 2004.
    2. Hanson, James R. Functional Group Chemistry. Bristol, UK: The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2001.
    3. Streitwieser, Andrew Jr., and Clayton H. Heathcock. Introduction to Organic Chemistry. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1981.
    4. Vollhardt, Peter C., and Neil E. Schore. Organic Chemistry: Structure and Function. 5th ed. New York, NY: W.H. Freeman and Company, 2007.
    5. Zlatkis, Albert, Eberhard Breitmaier, and Gunther Jung. A Concise Introduction to Organic Chemistry. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1973.

    Contributors and Attributions


    7.6: Stability of Alkenes is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.