How do you know when the double bond of an alkene like the one below is "not free to rotate" ?
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How do you know when the double bond of an alkene like the one below is "not free to rotate" ?
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How do you know when the double bond of an alkene like the one below is "not free to rotate" ?
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Like they said, double/triple bonds don't rotate at all, and this is independent of the substituent groups or anything else. This is why cis/trans alkenes don't interconvert.
I do recall a little blurb in my organic book mentioning that with enough heat you can rotate a C=C bond, but it's so extreme my prof told us to assume its impossible.
Ok, that was simple. To reap the full benefit of the actual question, predict how many absorptions will show up on the proton NMR spectrum.
Answer & explanation in white: 5, b/c the double bond does not rotate, the 2 methyl groups are not identical!
Not 100% correct, its just one of those exceptions. Good to know though (showed up on a Molecular Biology exam last semester), this is from my biology notesThey're all not free to rotate. Any double bond or partial double bond (amide, benzene, etc) will not rotate.
Not 100% correct, its just one of those exceptions. Good to know though (showed up on a Molecular Biology exam last semester), this is from my biology notes
"C-N that form peptide bond have a partial double bond character, that gives the O-C-N-H a planar and rigid structure, but there is rotation around C-N bond..."