Aromatic Hydrocarbons (Arenes)
These compounds are called “aromatic” because many have pleasant smells 🌸. Most contain a benzene ring – a special ring with unique stability despite being unsaturated.
Key Features of Benzene
- Molecular formula: \( \ce{C6H6} \)
- All 6 carbon and 6 hydrogen atoms are identical ⚛️
- Forms only one monosubstituted product
- Disubstituted products have three isomers: ortho (1,2), meta (1,3), para (1,4)
Structure of Benzene
Kekulé proposed a cyclic structure with alternating single/double bonds, but experiments showed:
- All C-C bonds are equal length (139 pm) – between single (154 pm) and double bonds (133 pm)
- Explained by resonance and electron delocalization:\[ \text{Resonance hybrid} = \text{Structure A} \leftrightarrow \text{Structure B} \]
- Each carbon is \( sp^2 \)-hybridized with delocalized π-electrons above/below the ring 🍩
Aromaticity Rules (Hückel’s Rule)
A compound is aromatic if it has:
- Planar ring structure
- Complete π-electron delocalization
- \((4n + 2)\) π-electrons (\( n = 0,1,2,…\)) e.g.,
- Benzene (\( n=1 \), 6π-electrons)
- Naphthalene (\( n=2 \), 10π-electrons)
Preparing Benzene
- Cyclic polymerization of ethyne: \[ 3\ce{CH#CH} \xrightarrow[\text{873 K}]{\text{Red hot Fe tube}} \ce{C6H6} \]
- Decarboxylation: \[ \ce{C6H5COONa} \xrightarrow{\ce{NaOH/CaO}} \ce{C6H6} + \ce{Na2CO3} \]
- Reduction of phenol: \[ \ce{C6H5OH} \xrightarrow{\text{Zn dust}} \ce{C6H6} + \ce{ZnO} \]
Properties of Aromatic Hydrocarbons
Physical: Colorless liquids/solids 💧, characteristic odor, immiscible with water, burn with sooty flame 🔥.
Chemical:
- Electrophilic Substitution (main reactions):
Reaction Reagents/Conditions Product Nitration Conc. HNO₃ + H₂SO₄, 323-333 K Nitrobenzene Halogenation X₂ + Anhyd. AlCl₃/FeCl₃ Haloarene Sulfonation Fuming H₂SO₄, Δ Benzenesulfonic acid Friedel-Crafts Alkylation RCl + Anhyd. AlCl₃ Alkylbenzene Friedel-Crafts Acylation RCOCl + Anhyd. AlCl₃ Acylbenzene - Addition Reactions (under forcing conditions):
- Hydrogenation: \[ \ce{C6H6} + 3\ce{H2} \xrightarrow[\Delta]{\text{Ni}} \ce{C6H12} \]
- With Cl₂ (UV light): \[ \ce{C6H6} + 3\ce{Cl2} \xrightarrow{\text{UV}} \ce{C6H6Cl6} \] (BHC/Gammaxane)
- Combustion: \[ \ce{C6H6} + \frac{15}{2}\ce{O2} -> 6\ce{CO2} + 3\ce{H2O} \] (sooty flame)
Directive Influence of Substituents
Existing groups guide where new substitutions occur:
- Ortho/Para Directors (activate ring):
-OH, -NH₂, -OCH₃, -CH₃, halogens (-Cl, -Br) ✨Reason: Increase electron density at o/p positions via resonance.
- Meta Directors (deactivate ring):
-NO₂, -CN, -COOH, -CHO, -SO₃H ⚠️Reason: Withdraw electrons, making meta position less electron-poor.
Carcinogenicity Warning ⚠️
Benzene and fused-ring polycyclic aromatics (e.g., benzpyrene) are toxic and carcinogenic. They form during incomplete combustion of coal/tobacco and can damage DNA.
High-Yield NEET Concepts 🔥
- Benzene Structure & Resonance: Equal bond lengths, stability, delocalization.
- Electrophilic Substitution: Mechanism (carbocation intermediate), key reactions (nitration, Friedel-Crafts).
- Hückel’s Rule: (4n+2) π-electrons for aromaticity.
- Directive Influence: Ortho/para vs meta directing groups with examples.
- Benzene Preparation: Decarboxylation & ethyne polymerization.