THE HALOGENATION OF ALKENES


          

This page looks at the reaction of the carbon-carbon double bond in alkenes such as ethene with halogens such as chlorine, bromine and iodine. This is called halogenation.

Reactions where the chlorine or bromine are in solution (for example, "bromine water") are slightly more complicated and are treated separately at the end.


          

Simple reactions involving halogens

In each case, we will look at ethene as typical of all of the alkenes. There are no complications as far as the basic facts are concerned as the alkenes get bigger.

Ethene and fluorine

Ethene reacts explosively with fluorine to give carbon and hydrogen fluoride gas. This isn't a useful reaction, and you aren't likely to need it for exam purposes in the UK at this level (A level or equivalent).

Ethene and chlorine or bromine or iodine

In each case you get an addition reaction. For example, bromine adds to give 1,2-dibromoethane.


Note:  Follow this link if you aren't happy about naming organic compounds

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The reaction with bromine happens at room temperature. If you have a gaseous alkene like ethene, you can bubble it through either pure liquid bromine or a solution of bromine in an organic solvent like tetrachloromethane. The reddish-brown bromine is decolourised as it reacts with the alkene.

A liquid alkene (like cyclohexene) can be shaken with liquid bromine or its solution in tetrachloromethane.

Chlorine reacts faster than bromine, but the chemistry is similar. Iodine reacts much, much more slowly, but again the chemistry is similar. You are much more likely to meet the bromine case than either of these.


Note:  If you are interested in the mechanism for the addition of bromine to alkenes you will find it in the mechanism section of this site.

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Alkenes and bromine water

Using bromine water as a test for alkenes

If you shake an alkene with bromine water (or bubble a gaseous alkene through bromine water), the solution becomes colourless. Alkenes decolourise bromine water.

The chemistry of the test

This is complicated by the fact that the major product isn't 1,2-dibromoethane. The water also gets involved in the reaction, and most of the product is 2-bromoethanol.

However, there will still be some 1,2-dibromoethane formed, so at this sort of level you can probably get away with quoting the simpler equation:


Note:  Check your syllabus, past papers and mark schemes to find out what you need to be able to do. If you are studying a UK-based syllabus (A level or equivalent) and haven't got any of these, follow this link to find out how to get hold of them. If you are working at a lower level, use the simpler equation.

If you are interested in the mechanism for this reaction, I'm afraid that you won't find it on this site because it isn't on any of the UK-based syllabuses. You can, however, deduce it fairly easily if you know the mechanism for the addition of pure bromine. Instead of the intermediate ion being attacked by a bromide ion, it is much more likely to be hit by a lone pair on an oxygen of a water molecule, followed by loss of a hydrogen ion from the product.




          

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