fbpx
Wikipedia

Alkyl group

In organic chemistry, an alkyl group is an alkane missing one hydrogen.[1] The term alkyl is intentionally unspecific to include many possible substitutions. An acyclic alkyl has the general formula of −CnH2n+1. A cycloalkyl group is derived from a cycloalkane by removal of a hydrogen atom from a ring and has the general formula −CnH2n−1.[2] Typically an alkyl is a part of a larger molecule. In structural formulae, the symbol R is used to designate a generic (unspecified) alkyl group. The smallest alkyl group is methyl, with the formula −CH3.[3]

Isopropyl group
Methyl group

Related concepts edit

Alkylation is the addition of alkyl groups to molecules, often by alkylating agents such as alkyl halides.

Alkylating antineoplastic agents are a class of compounds that are used to treat cancer. In such case, the term alkyl is used loosely. For example, nitrogen mustards are well-known alkylating agents, but they are not simple hydrocarbons.

In chemistry, alkyl is a group, a substituent, that is attached to other molecular fragments. For example, alkyl lithium reagents have the empirical formula Li(alkyl), where alkyl = methyl, ethyl, etc. A dialkyl ether is an ether with two alkyl groups, e.g., diethyl ether O(CH2CH3)2.

In medicinal chemistry edit

In medicinal chemistry, the incorporation of alkyl chains into some chemical compounds increases their lipophilicity. This strategy has been used to increase the antimicrobial activity of flavanones and chalcones.[4]

Alkyl cations, anions, and radicals edit

Usually, alkyl groups are attached to other atoms or groups of atoms. Free alkyls occur as neutral radicals, as anions, or as cations. The cations are called carbocations. The anions are called carbanions. The neutral alkyl free radicals have no special name. Such species are usually encountered only as transient intermediates. However, persistent alkyl radicals with half-lives "from seconds to years" have been prepared.[5] Typically alkyl cations are generated using superacids and alkyl anions are observed in the presence of strong bases. Alkyl radicals can be generated by a photochemical reaction or by homolytic cleavage.[6] Alkyls are commonly observed in mass spectrometry of organic compounds. Simple alkyls (especially methyl) are observed in the interstellar space as well.

Nomenclature edit

Alkyl groups form homologous series. The simplest series have the general formula −CnH2n+1. Alkyls include methyl, (−CH3), ethyl (−C2H5), propyl (−C3H7), butyl (−C4H9), pentyl (−C5H11), and so on. Alkyl groups that contain one ring have the formula −CnH2n−1, e.g. cyclopropyl and cyclohexyl. The formula of alkyl radicals are the same as alkyl groups, except the free valence "" is replaced by the dot "•" and adding "radical" to the name of the alkyl group (e.g. methyl radical •CH3).

The naming convention is taken from IUPAC nomenclature:

Number of carbon atoms 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Prefix meth- eth- prop- but- pent- hex- hept- oct- non- dec- undec- dodec- tridec- tetradec-
Group name Methyl Ethyl Propyl Butyl Pentyl Hexyl Heptyl Octyl Nonyl Decyl Undecyl Dodecyl Tridecyl Tetradecyl


The prefixes taken from IUPAC nomenclature are used to name branched chained structures by their substituent groups, for example 3-methylpentane:

 

The structure of 3-methylpentane is viewed as consisting of two parts. First, five atoms comprise the longest straight chain of carbon centers. The parent five-carbon compound is named pentane (highlighted blue). The methyl "substituent" or "group" is highlighted red. According to the usual rules of nomenclature, alkyl groups are included in the name of the molecule before the root, as in methylpentane. This name is, however, ambiguous, as the methyl branch could be on various carbon atoms. Thus, the name is 3-methylpentane to avoid ambiguity: The 3- is because the methyl is attached to the third of the five carbon atoms.

If there is more than one of the same alkyl group attached to a chain, then the prefixes are used on the alkyl groups to indicate multiples (i.e., di, tri, tetra, etc.)

 

This compound is known as 2,3,3-trimethylpentane. Here three identical alkyl groups attached to carbon atoms 2, 3, and 3. The numbers are included in the name to avoid ambiguity about the position of the groups, and "tri" indicates that there are three identical methyl groups. If one of the methyl groups attached to the third carbon atom were instead an ethyl group, then the name would be 3-ethyl-2,3-dimethylpentane. When there are different alkyl groups, they are listed in alphabetical order.

In addition, each position on an alkyl chain can be described according to how many other carbon atoms are attached to it. The terms primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary refer to a carbon attached to one, two, three, or four other carbons respectively.

Cn Trivial name Symbol Condensed formula IUPAC status Preferred IUPAC name Skeletal formula
С1 methyl Ме −CH3 methyl
С2 ethyl Et −CH2−CH3 ethyl
С3 propyl, n-propyl Pr, nPr, n-Pr −CH2−CH2−CH3 propyl
isopropyl iPr, i-Pr,iPr −CH(−CH3)2 2-propyl
С4 n-butyl Bu, n-Bu, nBu −CH2−CH2−CH2−CH3 butyl  
isobutyl iBu, i-Bu, iBu −CH2−CH(−CH3)2 2-methylpropyl  
sec-butyl sBu, s-Bu, sBu −CH(−CH3)−CH2−CH3 2-butyl  
tert-butyl tBu, t-Bu, tBu −C(−CH3)3 tert-butyl  
С5 n-pentyl, amyl Pe, Am, nPe, n-Pe, nPe, nAm −CH2−CH2−CH2−CH2−CH3 pentyl
tert-pentyl tPe, t-Pe, tPe −C(−CH3)2−CH2−CH3 No longer recommended 2-methylbutan-2-yl (aka 1,1-dimethylpropyl)
neopentyl −CH2−C(−CH3)3 No longer recommended 2,2-dimethylpropyl
isopentyl, isoamyl −CH2−CH2−CH(−CH3)2 No longer recommended 3-methylbutyl
sec-pentyl sPe, s-Pe, sPe −CH(−CH3)−CH2−CH2−CH3 pentan-2-yl(or (1-Methylbutyl))
3-pentyl −CH(−CH2−CH3)2 pentan-3-yl (also known as (1-Ethylpropyl))
sec-isopentyl, sec-isoamyl, siamyl Sia −CH(−CH3)−CH(−CH3)2 3-methylbutan-2-yl (or (1,2-Dimethylpropyl))
active pentyl −CH2−CH(−CH3)−CH2−CH3 2-methylbutyl

Etymology edit

The first named alkyl radical was ethyl, named so by Liebig in 1833 from the German word "Äther" (which in turn had been derived from the Greek word "aither" meaning "air", for the substance now known as diethyl ether) and the Greek word ύλη (hyle), meaning "matter".[7] This was followed by methyl (Dumas and Peligot in 1834, meaning "spirit of wood"[8]) and amyl (Auguste Cahours in 1840[9]). The word alkyl was introduced by Johannes Wislicenus in or before 1882, based on the German word "Alkoholradikale" and then-common suffix -yl.[10][11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "alkyl groups". doi:10.1351/goldbook.A00228Error in template * unknown parameter name (GoldBookRef): "title; file"
  2. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "cycloalkyl groups". doi:10.1351/goldbook.C01498Error in template * unknown parameter name (GoldBookRef): "title; file"
  3. ^ Virtual Textbook of Organic Chemistry Naming Organic Compounds Archived 2016-05-21 at the Portuguese Web Archive
  4. ^ Mallavadhani UV, Sahoo L, Kumar KP, Murty US (2013). "Synthesis and antimicrobial screening of some novel chalcones and flavanones substituted with higher alkyl chains". Medicinal Chemistry Research. 23 (6): 2900–2908. doi:10.1007/s00044-013-0876-x. S2CID 5159000.
  5. ^ Griller, David; Ingold, Keith U. (1976-01-01). "Persistent carbon-centered radicals". Accounts of Chemical Research. 9 (1): 13–19. doi:10.1021/ar50097a003. ISSN 0001-4842.
  6. ^ Crespi, Stefano; Fagnoni, Maurizio (2020-09-09). "Generation of Alkyl Radicals: From the Tyranny of Tin to the Photon Democracy". Chemical Reviews. 120 (17): 9790–9833. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00278. ISSN 0009-2665. PMC 8009483. PMID 32786419.
  7. ^ Rocke, Alan (2012). From the Molecular World: A Nineteenth-Century Science Fantasy. Springer. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-642-27415-2. Ethyl radicals (named by Liebig in 1833 from the Greek and German word "aether" plus Greek "hyle"
  8. ^ Rocke, Alan (2012). From the Molecular World: A Nineteenth-Century Science Fantasy. Springer. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-642-27415-2. The methyl radical ... named from Greek roots, by Dumas and Peligot in 1834: methyl = methy + hyle ("spirit" + "wood")
  9. ^ Rocke, Alan (2012). From the Molecular World: A Nineteenth-Century Science Fantasy. Springer. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-642-27415-2. Amyl radicals ("amilène" was coined by Auguste Cahours in 1840, to designate a substance from potato starch after fermentation and distillation
  10. ^ Rocke, Alan (2012). From the Molecular World: A Nineteenth-Century Science Fantasy. Springer. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-642-27415-2. "Alkyl" was coined without fanfare by Johannes Wislicenus, professor at Würzburg; an early use (perhaps not the first) is in his 1882 article [22, 244]. The word was derived from the first three letters of "Alkoholradicale" combined with the suffix -yl; it was (and is) a generic term for any of those radicals who bear the "first names" methyl, ethyl, propyl, butyl, amyl, etc.
  11. ^ Wisclicenus, Johannes (1882). "Ueber die Schätzung von Haftenenergien der Halogene und des Natriums an organischen Resten". Ann. Chem. 212: 239–250. doi:10.1002/jlac.18822120107.

alkyl, group, organic, chemistry, alkyl, group, alkane, missing, hydrogen, term, alkyl, intentionally, unspecific, include, many, possible, substitutions, acyclic, alkyl, general, formula, cnh2n, cycloalkyl, group, derived, from, cycloalkane, removal, hydrogen. In organic chemistry an alkyl group is an alkane missing one hydrogen 1 The term alkyl is intentionally unspecific to include many possible substitutions An acyclic alkyl has the general formula of CnH2n 1 A cycloalkyl group is derived from a cycloalkane by removal of a hydrogen atom from a ring and has the general formula CnH2n 1 2 Typically an alkyl is a part of a larger molecule In structural formulae the symbol R is used to designate a generic unspecified alkyl group The smallest alkyl group is methyl with the formula CH3 3 Isopropyl groupMethyl group Contents 1 Related concepts 2 In medicinal chemistry 3 Alkyl cations anions and radicals 4 Nomenclature 5 Etymology 6 See also 7 ReferencesRelated concepts editAlkylation is the addition of alkyl groups to molecules often by alkylating agents such as alkyl halides Alkylating antineoplastic agents are a class of compounds that are used to treat cancer In such case the term alkyl is used loosely For example nitrogen mustards are well known alkylating agents but they are not simple hydrocarbons In chemistry alkyl is a group a substituent that is attached to other molecular fragments For example alkyl lithium reagents have the empirical formula Li alkyl where alkyl methyl ethyl etc A dialkyl ether is an ether with two alkyl groups e g diethyl ether O CH2CH3 2 In medicinal chemistry editIn medicinal chemistry the incorporation of alkyl chains into some chemical compounds increases their lipophilicity This strategy has been used to increase the antimicrobial activity of flavanones and chalcones 4 Alkyl cations anions and radicals editUsually alkyl groups are attached to other atoms or groups of atoms Free alkyls occur as neutral radicals as anions or as cations The cations are called carbocations The anions are called carbanions The neutral alkyl free radicals have no special name Such species are usually encountered only as transient intermediates However persistent alkyl radicals with half lives from seconds to years have been prepared 5 Typically alkyl cations are generated using superacids and alkyl anions are observed in the presence of strong bases Alkyl radicals can be generated by a photochemical reaction or by homolytic cleavage 6 Alkyls are commonly observed in mass spectrometry of organic compounds Simple alkyls especially methyl are observed in the interstellar space as well Nomenclature editAlkyl groups form homologous series The simplest series have the general formula CnH2n 1 Alkyls include methyl CH3 ethyl C2H5 propyl C3H7 butyl C4H9 pentyl C5H11 and so on Alkyl groups that contain one ring have the formula CnH2n 1 e g cyclopropyl and cyclohexyl The formula of alkyl radicals are the same as alkyl groups except the free valence is replaced by the dot and adding radical to the name of the alkyl group e g methyl radical CH3 The naming convention is taken from IUPAC nomenclature Number of carbon atoms 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14Prefix meth eth prop but pent hex hept oct non dec undec dodec tridec tetradec Group name Methyl Ethyl Propyl Butyl Pentyl Hexyl Heptyl Octyl Nonyl Decyl Undecyl Dodecyl Tridecyl TetradecylThe prefixes taken from IUPAC nomenclature are used to name branched chained structures by their substituent groups for example 3 methylpentane nbsp The structure of 3 methylpentane is viewed as consisting of two parts First five atoms comprise the longest straight chain of carbon centers The parent five carbon compound is named pentane highlighted blue The methyl substituent or group is highlighted red According to the usual rules of nomenclature alkyl groups are included in the name of the molecule before the root as in methylpentane This name is however ambiguous as the methyl branch could be on various carbon atoms Thus the name is 3 methylpentane to avoid ambiguity The 3 is because the methyl is attached to the third of the five carbon atoms If there is more than one of the same alkyl group attached to a chain then the prefixes are used on the alkyl groups to indicate multiples i e di tri tetra etc nbsp This compound is known as 2 3 3 trimethylpentane Here three identical alkyl groups attached to carbon atoms 2 3 and 3 The numbers are included in the name to avoid ambiguity about the position of the groups and tri indicates that there are three identical methyl groups If one of the methyl groups attached to the third carbon atom were instead an ethyl group then the name would be 3 ethyl 2 3 dimethylpentane When there are different alkyl groups they are listed in alphabetical order In addition each position on an alkyl chain can be described according to how many other carbon atoms are attached to it The terms primary secondary tertiary and quaternary refer to a carbon attached to one two three or four other carbons respectively Cn Trivial name Symbol Condensed formula IUPAC status Preferred IUPAC name Skeletal formulaS1 methyl Me CH3 methylS2 ethyl Et CH2 CH3 ethylS3 propyl n propyl Pr nPr n Pr CH2 CH2 CH3 propylisopropyl iPr i Pr iPr CH CH3 2 2 propylS4 n butyl Bu n Bu nBu CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 butyl nbsp isobutyl iBu i Bu iBu CH2 CH CH3 2 2 methylpropyl nbsp sec butyl sBu s Bu sBu CH CH3 CH2 CH3 2 butyl nbsp tert butyl tBu t Bu tBu C CH3 3 tert butyl nbsp S5 n pentyl amyl Pe Am nPe n Pe nPe nAm CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH3 pentyltert pentyl tPe t Pe tPe C CH3 2 CH2 CH3 No longer recommended 2 methylbutan 2 yl aka 1 1 dimethylpropyl neopentyl CH2 C CH3 3 No longer recommended 2 2 dimethylpropylisopentyl isoamyl CH2 CH2 CH CH3 2 No longer recommended 3 methylbutylsec pentyl sPe s Pe sPe CH CH3 CH2 CH2 CH3 pentan 2 yl or 1 Methylbutyl 3 pentyl CH CH2 CH3 2 pentan 3 yl also known as 1 Ethylpropyl sec isopentyl sec isoamyl siamyl Sia CH CH3 CH CH3 2 3 methylbutan 2 yl or 1 2 Dimethylpropyl active pentyl CH2 CH CH3 CH2 CH3 2 methylbutylEtymology editThe first named alkyl radical was ethyl named so by Liebig in 1833 from the German word Ather which in turn had been derived from the Greek word aither meaning air for the substance now known as diethyl ether and the Greek word ylh hyle meaning matter 7 This was followed by methyl Dumas and Peligot in 1834 meaning spirit of wood 8 and amyl Auguste Cahours in 1840 9 The word alkyl was introduced by Johannes Wislicenus in or before 1882 based on the German word Alkoholradikale and then common suffix yl 10 11 See also edit nbsp Look up alkyl group in Wiktionary the free dictionary Alkane Alkene Alkyne Aryl Hydrocarbon IUPAC nomenclature of organic chemistryReferences edit IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 alkyl groups doi 10 1351 goldbook A00228Error in template unknown parameter name GoldBookRef title file IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 cycloalkyl groups doi 10 1351 goldbook C01498Error in template unknown parameter name GoldBookRef title file Virtual Textbook of Organic Chemistry Naming Organic Compounds Archived 2016 05 21 at the Portuguese Web Archive Mallavadhani UV Sahoo L Kumar KP Murty US 2013 Synthesis and antimicrobial screening of some novel chalcones and flavanones substituted with higher alkyl chains Medicinal Chemistry Research 23 6 2900 2908 doi 10 1007 s00044 013 0876 x S2CID 5159000 Griller David Ingold Keith U 1976 01 01 Persistent carbon centered radicals Accounts of Chemical Research 9 1 13 19 doi 10 1021 ar50097a003 ISSN 0001 4842 Crespi Stefano Fagnoni Maurizio 2020 09 09 Generation of Alkyl Radicals From the Tyranny of Tin to the Photon Democracy Chemical Reviews 120 17 9790 9833 doi 10 1021 acs chemrev 0c00278 ISSN 0009 2665 PMC 8009483 PMID 32786419 Rocke Alan 2012 From the Molecular World A Nineteenth Century Science Fantasy Springer p 62 ISBN 978 3 642 27415 2 Ethyl radicals named by Liebig in 1833 from the Greek and German word aether plus Greek hyle Rocke Alan 2012 From the Molecular World A Nineteenth Century Science Fantasy Springer p 62 ISBN 978 3 642 27415 2 The methyl radical named from Greek roots by Dumas and Peligot in 1834 methyl methy hyle spirit wood Rocke Alan 2012 From the Molecular World A Nineteenth Century Science Fantasy Springer p 62 ISBN 978 3 642 27415 2 Amyl radicals amilene was coined by Auguste Cahours in 1840 to designate a substance from potato starch after fermentation and distillation Rocke Alan 2012 From the Molecular World A Nineteenth Century Science Fantasy Springer p 62 ISBN 978 3 642 27415 2 Alkyl was coined without fanfare by Johannes Wislicenus professor at Wurzburg an early use perhaps not the first is in his 1882 article 22 244 The word was derived from the first three letters of Alkoholradicale combined with the suffix yl it was and is a generic term for any of those radicals who bear the first names methyl ethyl propyl butyl amyl etc Wisclicenus Johannes 1882 Ueber die Schatzung von Haftenenergien der Halogene und des Natriums an organischen Resten Ann Chem 212 239 250 doi 10 1002 jlac 18822120107 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alkyl group amp oldid 1209321418 Nomenclature, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.