Hydrocarbon is any of a class of organic chemical compounds composed
only of the elements carbon (C) and hydrogen (H). The carbon atoms join
together to form the framework of the compound; the hydrogen atoms
attach to them in many different configurations. Hydrocarbons are the
principal constituents of petroleum and natural gas. They serve as fuels
and lubricants as well as raw materials for the production of plastics,
fibres, rubbers, solvents, explosives, and industrial chemicals.
Many hydrocarbons occur in nature. In addition to making up fossil
fuels, they are present in trees and plants, as, for example, in the
form of pigments called carotenes that occur in carrots and green
leaves. More than 98 percent of natural crude rubber is a hydrocarbon
polymer, a chainlike molecule consisting of many units linked together.
The structures and chemistry of individual hydrocarbons depend in large
part on the types of chemical bonds that link together the atoms of
their constituent molecules.
Nineteenth-century chemists classified hydrocarbons as either aliphatic or aromatic on the basis of their sources and properties. Aliphatic (from Greek aleiphar, “fat”) described hydrocarbons derived by chemical degradation of fats or oils. Aromatic hydrocarbons constituted a group of related substances obtained by chemical degradation of certain pleasant-smelling plant extracts. The terms aliphatic and aromatic are retained in modern terminology, but the compounds they describe are distinguished on the basis of structure rather than origin.
Aliphatic hydrocarbons are divided into three main groups according to
the types of bonds they contain: alkanes, alkenes, and alkynes. Alkanes
have only single bonds, alkenes contain a carbon-carbon double bond, and
alkynes contain a carbon-carbon triple bond. Aromatic hydrocarbons are
those that are significantly more stable than their Lewis structures
would suggest; i.e., they possess “special stability.” They are
classified as either arenes, which contain a benzene ring as a
structural unit, or nonbenzenoid aromatic hydrocarbons, which possess
special stability but lack a benzene ring as a structural unit.
This classification of hydrocarbons serves as an aid in associating
structural features with properties but does not require that a
particular substance be assigned to a single class. Indeed, it is common
for a molecule to incorporate structural units characteristic of two or
more hydrocarbon families. A molecule that contains both a
carbon-carbon triple bond and a benzene ring, for example, would exhibit
some properties that are characteristic of alkynes and others that are
characteristic of arenes.
Alkanes are described as saturated hydrocarbons, while alkenes, alkynes, and aromatic hydrocarbons are said to be unsaturated.
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