Cycloalkanes are cyclic hydrocarbons, meaning that the carbons of the molecule are arranged in the form of a ring. Cycloalkanes are also saturated, meaning that all of the carbons atoms that make up the ring are single bonded to other atoms (no double or triple bonds). There are also polycyclic alkanes, which areCycloalkanes are cyclic hydrocarbons, meaning that the carbons of the molecule are arranged in the form of a ring. Cycloalkanes are also saturated, meaning that all of the carbons atoms that make up the ring are single bonded to other atoms (no double or triple bonds). There are also polycyclic alkanes, which are molecules that contain two or more cycloalkanes that are joined, forming multiple rings.
Many organic compounds found in nature or created in a laboratory contain rings of carbon atoms with distinguishing chemical properties; these compounds are known as cycloalkanes. Cycloalkanes only contain carbon-hydrogen bonds and carbon-carbon single bonds, but in cycloalkanes, the carbon atoms are joined in a ring. The smallest cycloalkane is cyclopropane.
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If you count the carbons and hydrogens, you will see that they no longer fit the general formula CnH2n+2. By joining the carbon atoms in a ring,two hydrogen atoms have been lost. The general formula for a cycloalkane is CnH2n. Cyclic compounds are not all flat molecules. All of the cycloalkanes, from cyclopentane upwards, exist as "puckered rings". Cyclohexane, for example, has a ring structure that looks like this:
Figure 2: This is known as the "chair" form of cyclohexane from its shape, which vaguely resembles a chair. Note: Â The cyclohexane molecule is constantly changing, with the atom on the left, which is currently pointing down, flipping up, and the atom on the right flipping down. During this process, another (slightly less stable) form of cyclohexane is formed known as the "boat" form. In this arrangement, both of these atoms are either pointing up or down at the same time
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In addition to being saturated cyclic hydrocarbons, cycloalkanes may have multiple substituents or functional groups that further determine their unique chemical properties. The most common and useful cycloalkanes in organic chemistry are cyclopentane and cyclohexane, although other cycloalkanes varying in the number of carbons can be synthesized. Understanding cycloalkanes and their properties are crucial in that many of the biological processes that occur in most living things have cycloalkane-like structures.
Glucose (6 carbon sugar) | Ribose (5 carbon sugar) | Cholesterol (polycyclic) |
 Although polycyclic compounds are important, they are highly complex and typically have common names accepted by IUPAC. However, the common names do not generally follow the basic IUPAC nomenclature rules. The general formula of the cycloalkanes is CnH2n where n is the number of carbons. The naming of cycloalkanes follows a simple set of rules that are built upon the same basic steps in naming alkanes. Cyclic hydrocarbons have the prefix "cyclo-".
For simplicity, cycloalkane molecules can be drawn in the form of skeletal structures in which each intersection between two lines is assumed to have a carbon atom with its corresponding number of hydrogens.
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Cycloalkane | Molecular Formula | Basic Structure |
Cyclopropane | C3H6 | |
Cyclobutane | C4H8 | |
Cyclopentane | C5H10 | Â |
Cyclohexane | C6H12 | Â |
Cycloheptane | C7H14 | Â |
Cyclooctane | C8H16 | Â |
Cyclononane | C9H18 | Â |
Cyclodecane | C10H20 | Â |
Cycloalkane | Cycloalkyl |
cyclopropane | cyclopropyl |
cyclobutane | cyclobutyl |
cyclopentane | cyclopentyl |
cyclohexane | cyclohexyl |
cycloheptane | cycloheptyl |
cyclooctane | cyclooctyl |
cyclononane | cyclononanyl |
cyclodecane | cyclodecanyl |
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Example |
The longest straight chain contains 10 carbons, compared with cyclopropane, which only contains 3 carbons. Because cyclopropane is a substituent, it would be named a cyclopropyl-substituted alkane. |
(1+3=4) Â Â NOTÂ Â Â (1+5=6)
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(ex: 2-bromo-1-chloro-3-methylcyclopentane)
(ex: 1-chlorocyclohexane or chlorocyclohexane is acceptable)
There must always be commas between the numbers and the dashes that are between the numbers and the names.
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Example |
           (2-bromo-1,1-dimethylcyclohexane) |
Notice that the "f" of fluoro alphabetically precedes the "m" of methyl. Although "di" alphabetically precedes "f", it is not used in determining the alphabetical order.
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Example |
  (2-fluoro-1,1,-dimethylcyclohexane   NOT  1,1-dimethyl-2-fluorocyclohexane) |
Blue=Carbon   Yellow=Hydrogen  Green=Chlorine
Notice that chlorine and the methyl group are both pointed in the same direction on the axis of the molecule; therefore, they are cis.
   cis-1-chloro-2-methylcyclopentane
Cycloalkanes are very similar to the alkanes in reactivity, except for the very small ones, especially cyclopropane. Cyclopropane is significantly more reactive than what is expected because of the bond angles in the ring. Normally, when carbon forms four single bonds, the bond angles are approximately 109.5°. In cyclopropane, the bond angles are 60°.
With the electron pairs this close together, there is a significant amount of repulsion between the bonding pairs joining the carbon atoms, making the bonds easier to break.
Alcohol (-OH) substituents take the highest priority for carbon atom numbering in IUPAC nomenclature. The carbon atom with the alcohol substituent must be labeled as 1. Molecules containing an alcohol group have an ending "-ol", indicating the presence of an alcohol group. If there are two alcohol groups, the molecule will have a "di-" prefix before "-ol" (diol). If there are three alcohol groups, the molecule will have a "tri-" prefix before "-ol" (triol), etc.
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Example |
The alcohol substituent is given the lowest number even though the two methyl groups are on the same carbon atom and labeling 1 on that carbon atom would give the lowest possible numbers. Numbering the location of the alcohol substituent is unnecessary because the ending "-ol" indicates the presence of one alcohol group on carbon atom number 1.   2,2-dimethylcyclohexanol  NOT  1,1-dimethyl-cyclohexane-2-ol |
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Example |
  3-bromo-2-methylcyclopentanol  NOT   1-bromo-2-methyl-cyclopentane-2-ol |
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Example |
Blue=Carbon   Yellow=Hydrogen   Red=Oxygen     trans-cyclohexane-1,2-diol |
There are many other functional groups like alcohol, which are later covered in an organic chemistry course, and they determine the ending name of a molecule. The naming of these functional groups will be explained in depth later as their chemical properties are explained.
Name | Name ending |
alkene | -ene |
alkyne | -yne |
alcohol | -ol |
ether | -ether |
nitrile | -nitrile |
amine | -amine |
aldehyde | -al |
ketone | -one |
carboxylic acid | -oic acid |
ester | -oate |
amide | -amide |
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Although alkynes determine the name ending of a molecule, alkyne as a substituent on a cycloalkane is not possible because alkynes are planar and would require that the carbon that is part of the ring form 5 bonds, giving the carbon atom a negative charge.
However, a cycloalkane with a triple bond-containing substituent is possible if the triple bond is not directly attached to the ring.
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Example |
ethynylcyclooctane |
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Example |
1-propylcyclohexane |
Exercises |
Name the following structures. (Note: The structures are complex for practice purposes and may not be found in nature.)
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Draw the following structures.
Name the following structures. Blue=Carbon   Yellow=Hydrogen   Red=Oxygen   Green=Chlorine 13)        14)        15)        16)        17)            18)        19)  |
Answers |
1) cyclodecane        2) chlorocyclopentane or 1-chlorocyclopentane        3) trans-1-chloro-2-methylcycloheptane  4) 6-methyl-3-cyclopropyldecane   5) cyclopentylcyclodecane or 1-cyclopentylcyclodecane   6) 1,3-dibromo-1-chloro-2-fluorocycloheptane  7) 1-cyclobutyl-4-isopropylcyclohexane 8)          9)          10)          11)        12)  13)cyclohexane        14) cyclohexanol        15) chlorocyclohexane        16) cyclopentylcyclohexane        17) 1-chloro-3-methylcyclobutane  18) 2,3-dimethylcyclopentanol        19) cis-1-propyl-2-methylcyclopentane |
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Citations
"Organic Chemistry" by Chem Libre Texts  is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 / A derivative from the original work
"Organic Chemistry With a Biological Emphasis" by Tim Soderberg  is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 / A derivative from the original work