3.7.2

Arenes

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Structure of Benzene

Benzene is an aromatic hydrocarbon with delocalised electrons above and below the plane of the ring.

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Benzene

  • Benzene is a cyclic hydrocarbon structure containing six carbons and six hydrogens (C6H6).
  • The carbons in benzene are sp2 hybridised.
  • Despite its unsaturation, the reactivity of benzene is different from alkenes.
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Benzene structure

  • The structure of benzene is aromatic and contains delocalised p-electrons (𝜋-bonds), due to overlapping p orbitals.
  • These delocalised electrons give benzene the aromatic structure, which has increased stability compared to the theoretical cyclohexa-1,3,5-triene molecule and forces the structure into a planar geometry.
  • The overlap of electron density above and below the plane of the ring dictates the structural features and reactivity of benzene and its derivatives (arenes).
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Structural representation of benzene

  • To represent the mobility of double bonds in benzene, the skeletal structure shows that double bonds are not localised between two carbon atoms and the electrons can move around the entire structure.
  • The skeletal formula represents the true structure, which is a resonance hybrid.
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Evidence to support aromatic structure

  • The structural parameters of benzene have been characterised by modern analytical techniques.
  • Benzene shows key differences from both alkanes and alkenes.
  • The crystal structure of benzene demonstrates that all carbon-carbon bond lengths are the same length (0.139 nm).
  • The bond lengths are intermediate between C-C single-bond (0.154nm) and C=C double-bond (0.134nm) lengths, implying a bond order = 1.5.
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Evidence to support aromatic structure cont.

  • Benzene is planar with a trigonal planar geometry around each carbon (120° bond angles).
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Evidence to support aromatic structure cont.

  • Enthalpies for hydrogenation reactions of benzene can be compared to theoretical values for cyclohexa-1,3,5-triene to give evidence for increased stability of aromatic structures.
  • Hydrogenation of benzene is -208 kJ mol-1, which is 151 kJ mol-1 less exothermic than the theoretical value.
  • This increased stability is attributed to the delocalised electrons (aromaticity) and losing the aromaticity in addition reactions, such as hydrogenation, is unfavourable.

Reactions of Benzene

Benzene typically undergoes electrophilic substitution reactions, rather than addition.

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Substitution, not addition

  • Reactions of benzene and its derivatives are typically substitution and not addition.
  • This is different from what we observed with alkenes, which normally undergo electrophilic addition reactions.
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Substitution, not addition cont.

  • As with alkenes, the reaction pathway starts with high-electron density in 𝜋-bonds attracting and being attacked by an incoming electrophile.
  • Contrary to alkenes, in benzene, substitution and not addition occurs after the electrophilic attack.
  • Substitution regenerates the complete delocalisation of electrons throughout the ring and achieves a higher stability aromatic structure.

Jump to other topics

1Structure - Models of the Particulate of Matter

2Structure - Models of Bonding & Structure

3Structure - Classification of Matter

3.1The Periodic Table: Classification of Elements

3.2Periodic Trends

3.3Group 1 Alkali Metals

3.4Halogens

3.5Noble gases, group 18

3.6Functional Groups: Classification of Organic

3.7Functional Group Chemistry

3.8Alkanes

3.9Alcohols

3.10Halogenoalkanes

4Reactivity - What Drives Chemical Reaction?

5Reactivity - How Much, How Fast & How Far?

6Reactivity - The Mechanisms of Chemical Change

7Measurement, Data Processing & Analysis

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