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Double bounds on a ring

Lucid Dream

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 26, 2010
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82
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Florida
lets take the benzene ring, why do the double bonds not pull those to carbons into each other. Shouldn't there be a difference in distance? I'm my reading it's trying to explain how the electrons move freely amoungst the ring, but I'm still very iffy on this. If anyone thinks they can extract my question from this mess of words, please help.
 
If anyone thinks they can extract my question from this mess of words, please help.
Question: "What the fuck is up with benzene?"
Answer: Chemists don't know shit.

Stick with the non-localized theory where electrons are in two places at once and draw it like this.
benzene_1.gif


In effect there are no single bonds, and no double bonds, just an equal number of 3/2 bonds.
 
Wow, okay. I like this explanation, but my only problem is my book says different LOL. Thanks for bringing this to my attention. Its funny to think that we can make drugs that have direct effects on different functions of the body, and all kinds of really neat shit, but I can't get a 100% straight answer on the benzene ring LOL. Just goes to show how much we don't know.


Thanks.
 
In MO theory this is a direct consequence of the fact that the 3 molecular pi orbitals form a combination which evenly spreads the extra 6 electrons over 6 carbon atoms.

Seems to be a lot of theories out there. Makes this hard for me to choose. I have a feeling I'm going to be confused a lot for the next 5 years :)
 
I see you are in orgo so I'll expand by saying remember that each covalent bonds has 2 electrons. Therefore between any two carbons you do get a solid sigma bond and it is only the pi bond which is a half bond.
 
The electrons in the pi bonds are shared equally in over all the carbons. The ring representation is more accurate, but the three double bond representation is more formal.
 
Wow, okay. I like this explanation, but my only problem is my book says different LOL. Thanks for bringing this to my attention. Its funny to think that we can make drugs that have direct effects on different functions of the body, and all kinds of really neat shit, but I can't get a 100% straight answer on the benzene ring LOL. Just goes to show how much we don't know.


Thanks.

We know plenty. The structure of benzene has been determined very precisely, and its properties can be calculated with great precision. You are just seeing a limitation in the way that we can represent molecular structures in a simple drawing. This is an old problem that was solved by Kekule and Loschmidt in the 1860's.
 
Yes, in 1865, the German organic chemist Freidrich August Kekule von Stradonitz proposed the 6 membered ring structure of benzene. Chemists had known the empirical formula to benzene, however, the high degree of un-saturation remained a mystery until Kekule's proposition.

The funny thing is how Kekule came about this discovery. He told people that the structure had come to him in a vision, a vision of a snake devouring its own tail, encircling itself infinitely. This snake vision accounts for the delocalized ring of electrons.

Better yet, an old chemistry professor of mine claimed that Kekule's vision was a byproduct of a mescaline induced psychedelic experience. However, I have yet to find any evidence to back up this claim, and I've looked all over the internet.
 
Better yet, an old chemistry professor of mine claimed that Kekule's vision was a byproduct of a mescaline induced psychedelic experience. However, I have yet to find any evidence to back up this claim, and I've looked all over the internet.

Mescaline wouldn't be extracted for another three decades but if your professor meant peyote that would be possible.

Edit: Isolated not extracted.
 
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IMO benzene is the most beautiful chemical structure in existence. It's so clean and symmetric, simple, yet it just seems to make sense on some weird metaphysical level.
 
why do the double bonds not pull those to carbons into each other. Shouldn't there be a difference in distance?

They do. Bond length for alkanes is 1.54 angstroms. For benzene, it is 1.39 angstroms. This is not theory. This has been measured.
 
^The OP originally thought there were 3 double bonds and 3 single and the double bonds would be shorter than the singles.

IMO benzene is the most beautiful chemical structure in existence. It's so clean and symmetric, simple, yet it just seems to make sense on some weird metaphysical level.
I feel the same way about butanal. I mean but*anal* it's like metametaphysical weird.
 
Hehe yeah, it even smells like ass! Well more like feet or something, it smells bad anyway!
 
agree about the beauty of aromatic structures. they really do look almost exactly like we draw them:

3-9-2009-23-52-44-pentacene-ibm.png
 
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