Examples of acetylene in the following topics:
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Addition by Electrophilic Reagents
- This is seen in the ionization potentials of ethylene and acetylene.
- Since pi-electrons are less tightly held than sigma-electrons, we expect the ionization potentials of ethylene and acetylene to be lower than that of ethane, as is the case.
- Gas-phase proton affinities show the same order, with ethylene being more basic than acetylene, and ethane being less basic than either.
- For example, addition of HCl, acetic acid and hydrocyanic acid to acetylene give respectively the useful monomers vinyl chloride, vinyl acetate and acrylonitrile, as shown in the following equations.
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Polyatomic Molecules
- The empirical formula is often the same as the molecular formula, but not always; for example, the molecule acetylene has molecular formula C2H2, but the simplest integer ratio of elements is CH.
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Substitution of the Hydroxyl Hydrogen
- Alkynes may also serve as electrophiles in substitution reactions of this kind, as illustrated by the synthesis of vinyl acetate from acetylene.
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Hydration of Alkynes and Tautomerism
- However, unlike the additions to double bonds which give alcohol products, addition of water to alkynes gives ketone products ( except for acetylene which yields acetaldehyde ).
- For terminal alkynes the addition of water follows the Markovnikov rule, as in the second example below, and the final product ia a methyl ketone ( except for acetylene, shown in the first example ).
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Acidity of Terminal Alkynes
- Thus, the pKa of ethene is estimated at 44, and the pKa of ethyne (acetylene) is found to be 25, making it 1023 times stronger an acid than ethane.
- The first two equations show how acetylene can be converted to propyne; the last two equations present a synthesis of 2-pentyne from propyne.
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Bond Order
- Bond order is the number of chemical bonds between a pair of atoms; in diatomic nitrogen (N≡N) for example, the bond order is 3, while in acetylene (H−C≡C−H), the bond order between the two carbon atoms is 3 and the C−H bond order is 1.
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Hybridization in Molecules Containing Double and Triple Bonds
- The chemical bonding in acetylene (ethyne) (C2H2) consists of sp-sp overlap between the two carbon atoms forming a sigma bond, as well as two additional pi bonds formed by p-p overlap.
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Introduction to Bonding
- Acetylene has a triple bond, a special type of covalent bond that will be discussed later.
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Double and Triple Covalent Bonds
- The simplest triple-bonded organic compound is acetylene, C2H2.
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Chemical Bonding & Valence
- Multiple bonding, the sharing of two or more electron pairs, is illustrated by ethylene and formaldehyde (each has a double bond), and acetylene and hydrogen cyanide (each with a triple bond).