3.2.11

Evidence for Structure of Arenes

Test yourself on Evidence for Structure of Arenes

Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

Benzene Experimental Evidence (row)

The delocalised picture of benzene’s bonding is supported by a variety of experimental evidence.

X-ray diffraction

X-ray diffraction

  • X-ray diffraction allows you to measure the distances between atoms.
    • This experiment confirms that the bond length between every carbon is the same, rather than the alternating long and short bonds expected from Kekulé’s structure.
Hydrogenation enthalpies

Hydrogenation enthalpies

  • The delocalised model of benzene implies that the six overlapping p-orbitals provides more stability than three separate pi bonds.
    • We can test this by hydrogenating benzene.
  • When cyclohexene is hydrogenated, the enthalpy change is -120kJmol-1
    • This corresponds to the enthalpy change of hydrogenating one pi bond.
    • Cyclohexane is more stable than cyclohexene because it is saturated.
Hydrogenating benzene

Hydrogenating benzene

  • The enthalpy change for hydrogenating benzene is -207kJmol-1
  • This is smaller by 153kJmol-1 than the value you’d expect for three isolated pi bonds, -360kJmol-1
    • This implies that there is a significant extra stability to benzene.
    • This is due to the delocalisation.

Evidence for the Structure of Benzene

Many pieces of evidence have been used to prove the structure of benzene.

Structure of benzene

Structure of benzene

  • For years, chemists argued over what the best structure was to represent benzene.
Bond lengths

Bond lengths

  • All carbon-carbon bonds have been shown to be the same length.
    • This length (0.139 nm) is somewhere between the C-C and C=C bond lengths.
Bond angles

Bond angles

  • The structure has been proved to have a bond angle of 120o at each carbon.
    • This means the structure must be planar.
Enthalpy of hydrogenation

Enthalpy of hydrogenation

  • The enthalpy of hydrogenation for benzene is more positive than for cyclohexa-1,3,5-triene.
    • Hydrogenation is a form of addition reaction.
    • So this reaction breaks the aromaticity in the benzene ring, which is why it is unfavourable.
  • This reflects how benzene is more stable due to aromaticity.
Jump to other topics
1

Physical Chemistry

1.1

Atoms, Molecules & Stoichiometry

1.2

Atomic Structure

1.3

Chemical Bonding

1.4

States of Matter

1.5

Chemical Energetics

1.6

Electrochemistry

1.7

Equilibria

1.8

Partition Coefficient

1.9

Reaction Kinetics

2

Inorganic Chemistry

3

Organic Chemistry & Analysis

3.1

Introduction to Organic Chemistry

3.2

Hydrocarbons

3.3

Halogen Derivatives

3.4

Hydroxy Compounds

3.5

Carbonyl Compounds

3.6

Carboxylic Acids & Derivatives

3.7

Nitrogen Compounds

3.8

Polymerisation

3.9

Analytical Techniques

3.10

Organic Synthesis

Practice questions on Evidence for Structure of Arenes

Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
Answer all questions on Evidence for Structure of Arenes

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium