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The question is to give the structural formula of the following:

3-chlorohexa-2,4,-diene

Does the diene at the end mean a 2 double bonds? And then how is its structural formula?

2007-01-01 11:42:16 · 5 answers · asked by }{3@T 2 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

5 answers

Yes, diene means two double bonds. First write CH3-CH=C-CH=CHCH3.After the =C-, write up at the top -Cl. There you are!

2007-01-01 11:49:55 · answer #1 · answered by steve_geo1 7 · 0 0

the -di- before the -ene tells you there are two double bonds. The 2 and the 4 tell you where both of them start. One starts in carbon 2 and the other double bond stars in carbon 4. The -hexa- tells you there are six carbons and the 3-chloro tells you there is a chlorine atom attached to the third carbon.

2007-01-01 11:49:50 · answer #2 · answered by humby 2 · 0 0

Acidic and common situations DO remember while reacting epoxides, yet not once you're making epoxides. The mech for this oxidation is annoying clarify, as that is one step with 4 diverse arrows. because of the stearic undertaking we are confronted with in mCPBA (meta-chloro-perbenzoic acid), the least-substituted (or least alkylated) double bond will react. be conscious that usually the least-substituted pi bonds react first, different than interior the case the place we form a carbocation. the 1st pi bond to react in a carbocation case is the only that presents the final (maximum stable, maximum substituted C+). desire this helps

2016-12-15 06:24:35 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

that's true, you also can have diene, triene...... it depends on how many double bond in the compound.

CH3-CH=CCl-CH=CH-CH3

2007-01-01 11:59:46 · answer #4 · answered by giovabao 2 · 0 0

oh my!!! alkene's are DEFINED as compounds with double bonds. Don't you know that?

2007-01-01 21:29:06 · answer #5 · answered by MrZ 6 · 0 0

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