TOPIC

Haloalkanes

MY PROGRESS

Pug Score

0%

Getting Started

"Let's build your foundation!"

Activity Points

+0

Overview

Watch

Read

Next Steps


Get Started

Get unlimited access to all videos, practice problems, and study tools.

Unlimited practice
Full videos

BACK TO MENU

Topic Progress

Pug Score

0%

Getting Started

"Let's build your foundation!"

Videos Watched

0/0

Read

Not viewed


Activity Points

+0

Chapter 1.5

Mastering Haloalkanes: From Structure to Applications

Dive into the world of haloalkanes, exploring their structure, properties, and significance in organic chemistry. Learn through comprehensive lessons, real-world examples, and practical applications.


What You'll Learn

Define haloalkanes as saturated organic compounds with carbon-halogen bonds
Identify the general formula CnH(2n+2-x)Xx for haloalkanes
Classify haloalkanes as primary, secondary, or tertiary based on carbon bonding
Explain free radical substitution mechanism including initiation, propagation, and termination steps
Compare properties of haloalkanes including polarity, solubility, and reactivity
Apply IUPAC systematic nomenclature rules to name haloalkanes

What You'll Practice

1

Drawing structural formulas of haloalkanes from IUPAC names

2

Naming haloalkanes with multiple halogen and alkyl substituents in alphabetical order

3

Writing free radical substitution reaction mechanisms with UV light initiation

4

Testing for halide ions using silver nitrate and ammonia solution

5

Comparing intermolecular forces in haloalkanes versus alkanes and alcohols

Why This Matters

Understanding haloalkanes is essential for organic chemistry courses and applications in pharmaceuticals, refrigeration, and chemical synthesis. You'll use this knowledge when studying reaction mechanisms, environmental chemistry including ozone depletion, and creating complex organic molecules.

This Unit Includes

16 Video lessons
Learning resources

Skills

Haloalkanes
Organic Chemistry
Free Radicals
IUPAC Nomenclature
Reaction Mechanisms
Intermolecular Forces
Substitution Reactions
Functional Groups
Pug instructor
Failed to load modal content