Benzene
Benzene
Benzene
Index
Introduction
Characteristics of benzene
Nomenclature in aeromatic compound
Structure of Benzene
Stability of Benzene (Resonance)
Properties of Benzene
Reaction of Benzen
Nitration of benzene
Friedel Craft Alkylation
Friedel Craft Acylation:
Physical properties
Boiling point
Melting point
Soluility in water
Benzene-derivatives
Benzene-uses
Health issues
Introduction to Benzene (C6H6)
The term aromatic (Greek; aroma means fragrance) was first used for compounds having
pleasant odour although the structure was not known. Now the term aromatic is used for a class of
compounds having a characteristic stability despite having unsaturation. These may have one or
more benzene rings (benzenoid) or may not have benzene ring
Simplest organic, aromatic hydrocarbon and parent compound of numerous important
aromatic compounds. Benzene is a colourless liquid with a characteristic odour and is primarily
used in the production of polystyrene. It is highly toxic and is a known carcinogen; exposure to it
may cause leukemia. As a result, there are strict controls on benzene emissions.
Discovery of benzene:-
Benzene was first discovered by the English scientist Michael Faraday in 1825 in illuminating
gas. In 1834 German chemist Eilhardt Mitscherlich heated benzoic acid with lime and produced
benzene. In 1845 German chemist A.W. von Hofmann isolated benzene from coal tar.
The structure of benzene has been of interest since its discovery. German chemists Joseph
Loschmidt (in 1861) and August Kekule von Stradonitz (in 1866) independently proposed a cyclic
arrangement of six carbons with alternating single and double bonds. Kekule subsequently
modified his structural formula to one in which oscillation of the double bonds gave two
equivalent structures in rapid equilibrium. In 1931 American chemist Linus Pauling suggested that
benzene had a single structure, which was a resonance hybrid of the two Kekule structures.
Trivial names are more commonly used for aromatic compounds than is the case with other
compound families in organic chemistry. Though trivial names are not recommended, IUPAC rules
allow their use with common aromatic compounds, such as methylbenzene (toluene),
hydroxybenzene (phenol), and aminobenzene (aniline).
Monosubstituted benzene derivatives are named by analogy with other hydrocarbons -
with benzene as the parent name.
catechol
hydroquinone
resorcinol
Benzene derivatives with more than two substituents are named systematically
through the numeration of the substituents' positions. The position numbers must be
determined so that they are as small as possible. In the compound name, the substituent
names are arranged alphabetically and are prefixed to the parent name.
4.
5.
Reactions of Benzene
1. Niration of benzene:
Formation of electrophile NO2+:-
Loss of proton:-
Step I:
With RX
With ROH:
With alkene:
Step II:
Step III:
3. Friedel Craft Acylation:
Replacement of H+of benzene by RCO- group using carboxylic acid, esters, acid
chloride or acid anhydride as acylating agent in the presence of Lewis acid.
Mechanism:
(i)
(II) is more stable than (I) because each atom has a complete octet.
(ii)
(iii)
Examples:
Physical properties
1. Boiling point
In benzene, the only attractions between neighbouring molecules are vander
Waals dispersion forces. There is no permanent dipole on the molecule.
Methylbenzene boils at 111C. It is a bigger molecule and so the van der Waals
dispersion forces will be bigger.
2. Melting point
You might have expected that methylbenzene's melting point would be higher
than benzene's as well, but it isn't - it is much lower! Benzene melts at 5.5C;
methylbenzene at -95C. Molecules must pack efficiently in the solid if they are
to make best use of their intermolecular forces. Benzene is a tidy, symmetrical
molecule and packs very efficiently.
The methyl group sticking out in methylbenzene tends to disrupt the closeness
of the packing. If the molecules aren't as closely packed, the intermolecular
forces don't work as well and so the melting point falls.
3. Solubility in water
The arenes are insoluble in water.
Benzene is quite large compared with a water molecule. In order for benzene to
dissolve it would have to break lots of existing hydrogen bonds between water
molecules. You also have to break the quite strong van der Waals dispersion forces
between benzene molecules. Both of these cost energy.
The only new forces between the benzene and the water would be van der Waals
dispersion forces. These aren't as strong as hydrogen bonds (or the original
dispersion forces in the benzene), and so you wouldn't get much energy released
when they form.
benzene-derivatives
A number of the substituted benzene derivatives are well known and commercially
important compounds. For example, the substitution of a single methyl, hydroxyl, or amino
group in benzene results in the formation, respectively, of toluene (C6H5CH3), phenol
(C6H5OH), or aniline (C6H5NH2). Probably the best known disubstituted products are the
xylenes, C6H4(CH3)2. Three different xylene molecules are possible depending on whether
the methyl groups are adjacent to each other on the benzene ring (ortho-xylene),
separated by one carbon atom (meta-xylene), or opposite each other on the ring
(paraxylene). The removal of one hydrogen atom from the benzene molecule results in a
radical known as the phenyl group.
Benzene occurs so abundantly in and is obtained so easily from coal tar and
petroleum that there is virtually no reason to make it synthetically. Although benzene had
been recognized as a component of petroleum for many years, it was not produced
commercially from that source until the beginning of World War II.
benzene-uses
Benzene is used as a solvent in many commercial, industrial, and research
operations. It has long been of interest as a fuel because of its high octane number. Some
manufacturers, particularly in Europe, have used it as a gasoline additive to increase engine
efficiency and to improve starting qualities.
By far the most important use of benzene, however, is in the production of other
aromatic compounds. The word aromatic was originally applied to benzene because of its
distinctive odor, but it later took on a broader meaning, referring to any compound whose
molecular structure includes one or more benzene rings. The largest volume of compounds
made from benzene goes toward the production of commercially valuable polymers, such
as polystyrene, nylon, and synthetic rubber.
Synthetic fibers are produced by yet a third kind of benzene substitution sequence.
The addition of hydrogen to benzene converts it to cyclohexane (C6H12), which is then
oxidized to adipic acid (COOH[CH2]4-COOH) The acid can then be treated with
hexamethylene diamine to form nylon.
Health issues
The health risks associated with exposure to benzene have been known for many
years. The compound has both chronic and acute effects whether ingested by mouth,
taken in through the respiratory system, or absorbed through the skin. Acute effects
resulting from inhalation include irritation of the mucous membranes, headache,
instability, euphoria, convulsions, excitement or depression, and unconsciousness. The
ingestion of benzene has been associated with the development of bronchitis and
pneumonia, while exposure through the skin can cause drying, blistering, and erythema
(redness). Death can result from exposure to high concentrations of benzene. Chronic
effects resulting from benzene exposure include reduced white and red blood cell counts,
aplasia, and more rarely, leukemia.
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