Sign In

3.2 : Constitutional Isomers of Alkanes

Organic compounds of the same molecular formula can have different structural formulas called constitutional isomers,and the phenomenon is known as constitutional isomerism. Alkanes with four or more carbons showing multiple structures with the same molecular formulathereby exhibit constitutional isomerism.

The linear isomer of an alkane is prefixed by the term “n”; hence a linear isomer of pentane is known as n-pentane. Based on the type of branching, some of the branched isomers are given the prefixes “iso” and “neo”. For example, pentane has two-branched isomers, iso-pentaneand neo-pentane. Iso-pentane has a four-carbon straight chain with a single methyl substituent, whereas neo-pentane has a three-carbon straight chain with two methyl groups as substituents.

The possibility of branching increases with the growing number of carbon atoms in the chain across the homologue, leading to the exponential rise in the number of constitutional isomers. For example, the six-carbon alkane hexane has five isomers, whereas the number of isomers increases to 75 for the 10-carbon alkane decane.

Despite having the same molecular formula, isomers exhibit significant variation in their physical properties, such as melting points and boiling points.

Tags
Constitutional IsomersOrganic CompoundsMolecular FormulaStructural FormulasAlkaneLinear IsomerBranched IsomersN pentaneIso pentaneNeo pentaneBranchingCarbon AtomsHomologueExponential RiseHexaneDecanePhysical PropertiesMelting PointsBoiling Points

From Chapter 3:

article

Now Playing

3.2 : Constitutional Isomers of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

16.3K Views

article

3.1 : Structure of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

22.1K Views

article

3.3 : Nomenclature of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

15.7K Views

article

3.4 : Physical Properties of Alkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

9.4K Views

article

3.5 : Newman Projections

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

13.2K Views

article

3.6 : Conformations of Ethane and Propane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.5K Views

article

3.7 : Conformations of Butane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.4K Views

article

3.8 : Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

10.4K Views

article

3.9 : Conformations of Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

10.1K Views

article

3.10 : Conformations of Cyclohexane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

9.8K Views

article

3.11 : Chair Conformation of Cyclohexane

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

11.9K Views

article

3.12 : Stability of Substituted Cyclohexanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

10.7K Views

article

3.13 : Disubstituted Cyclohexanes: <em>cis-trans</em> Isomerism

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

10.1K Views

article

3.14 : Combustion Energy: A Measure of Stability in Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

Alkanes and Cycloalkanes

5.8K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved