Isomerism in Hydrocarbons (WJEC GCSE Chemistry)
Revision Note
Isomerism in Hydrocarbons
Higher Tier
Isomers are chemicals with the same molecular formula but a different structural formula
This means that isomers have the same type and number of atoms but they are arranged differently
Alkane isomers
The following alkanes do not have any isomers:
Methane, CH4
Ethane, C2H6
Propane, C3H8
This is because carbon atoms must always have four bonds and hydrogen atoms have one bond
Therefore, there is no way to rearrange the atoms in methane, ethane and propane to give a different arrangement of atoms
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Careful: Students will sometimes state that propane has two isomers:
The two molecules are not isomers because:
The longest carbon chain in both molecules is 3 carbons
They are both still arranged (starting from the left-hand side) as a carbon with 3 hydrogens followed by a carbon with 2 hydrogens followed by a carbon with 3 hydrogens
The molecular formula of the first alkane that can form isomers is C4H10
It forms 2 isomers:
One isomer is the simple, straight-chain alkane butane
To form the other isomer, a CH3 (methyl) group from the end of the butane chain is snapped off and switches places with a hydrogen atom on the second carbon of the remaining chain
Isomers of C4H10
There are two isomers with the molecular formula C4H10
The molecular formula of the second alkane that can form isomers is C5H12
It forms 3 isomers:
Isomer 1 is the simple, straight-chain alkane pentane
To form isomer 2, a CH3 (methyl) group from the end of the pentane chain is snapped off and switches places with a hydrogen atom on the second carbon of the remaining chain
To form isomer 3, the CH3 (methyl) groups from both ends of the pentane chain are snapped off and switch places with both hydrogen atoms on the central carbon of the remaining chain
Isomers of C5H12
There are three isomers with the molecular formula C5H12
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You are expected to be able to draw structural formulae for all isomers of C4H10 and C5H12.
Alkene isomers
The following alkenes do not have any isomers:
Ethene, C2H4
Propene, C3H6
There is no way to rearrange the atoms in ethene and propene to give a different arrangement of atoms
The molecular formula of the first alkene that can form isomers is C4H8
To determine the isomers, be aware that the carbon atoms in the longest chain are numbered from left to right
C4H8 forms 3 isomers:
Isomer 1 is a chain of 4 carbons with the carbon-carbon double bond between carbons 1 and 2
Isomer 2 is a chain of 4 carbons with the carbon-carbon double bond between carbons 2 and 3
Isomer 3 is formed from isomer 1, a CH3 (methyl) group from the end of the carbon chain is snapped off and switches places with a hydrogen atom on the second carbon of the remaining chain
Isomers of C4H8
There are three isomers with the molecular formula C4H8
Examiner Tips and Tricks
.You will not be expected to work with skeletal formulas.
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