Alkenes (AQA GCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Alkene structure
All alkenes contain a double carbon bond, which is shown as two lines between two of the carbon atoms i.e. C=C
All alkenes contain a double carbon bond, which is the functional group and is what allows alkenes to react in ways that alkanes cannot
The names and structure of the first four alkenes are shown below:
Alkene structure & formula
Displayed formula | Name | Molecular formula |
ethene | C2H4 | |
propene | C3H6 | |
but-1-ene | C4H8 | |
pent-1-ene | C5H10 |
The first four members of the alkene homologous series
Carbon-carbon double bond
Compounds that have a C=C double bond are also called unsaturated compounds
That means they can make more bonds with other atoms by opening up the C=C bond and allowing incoming atoms to form another single bond with each carbon atom of the functional group
Each of these carbon atoms now forms 4 single bonds instead of 1 double and 2 single bonds
This makes them much more reactive than alkanes
The carbon-carbon double bond
A carbon-carbon double can break and form a single bond, allowing more atoms to attach to the carbon atoms
Examiner Tips and Tricks
The numbers in butene, pentene and hexene refer to the carbon atom in which the C=C begins, counting from the left. E.g. pent-2-ene, C5H10 has the C=C between the 2nd and 3rd carbon atoms. In pent-3-ene the C=C bond is between the 3rd and 4th carbon atoms from the left.
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