Uncategorized

What are the physical properties of alkanes?

Here’s a summary of the physical properties of alkanes, which are the simplest hydrocarbons containing only single bonds (C–C and C–H):


1. State at Room Temperature

  • C₁–C₄: gases (methane, ethane, propane, butane)
  • C₅–C₁₇: liquids (pentane to heptadecane)
  • C₁₈ and above: solids (waxes, paraffin)

2. Color and Odor

  • Colorless and odorless in pure form
  • Commercial alkanes may have slight smell (e.g., natural gas has odorant added for detection)

3. Solubility

  • Insoluble in water (non-polar molecules, cannot form hydrogen bonds)
  • Soluble in non-polar organic solvents (like benzene, ether, carbon tetrachloride)

4. Density

  • Less dense than water (typical densities: 0.6–0.8 g/cm³)
  • They float on water.

5. Boiling and Melting Points

  • Increase with molecular weight (chain length) due to stronger van der Waals forces.
  • Branched alkanes have lower boiling points than straight-chain isomers (less surface area → weaker van der Waals forces).

Examples:

  • Methane (CH₄): –161°C
  • Ethane (C₂H₆): –89°C
  • Butane (C₄H₁₀): –1°C
  • Octane (C₈H₁₈): 125–126°C

6. Melting Points

  • Show an alternating pattern: even-numbered chains pack better → slightly higher melting points than odd-numbered chains of similar size.

7. Other Physical Traits

  • Odorless, colorless, non-polar
  • Low reactivity in physical interactions
  • Flammable: readily combust in air producing CO₂ and H₂O
  • Viscosity: increases with molecular weight

In short: alkanes are non-polar, hydrophobic, low-density, colorless, and mostly unreactive physically, with properties strongly dependent on chain length and branching.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *