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Tetramethylbutane


Tetramethylbutane, sometimes called hexamethylethane, is a hydrocarbon with formula C8H18 or (H3C-)3C-C(-CH3)3. It is the most heavily branched and most compact of the octane isomers, the only one with a butane (C4) backbone. Because of its highly symmetrical structure, it has a very high melting point and a short liquid range; in fact, it is the smallest saturated acyclic hydrocarbon that appears as a solid at a room temperature of 25 °C. (Among cyclic hydrocarbons, cubane, C8H8, norbornane, C7H12 and norbornene, C7H10 are even smaller and are also solid at room temperature.) It is also the most stable C8H18 isomer, with a heat of formation 4.18 kcal/mol lower than that of n-octane, a fact that has been attributed to stabilizing dispersive interactions (electron correlation) between the methyl groups (protobranching).

The compound can be obtained from ethyl bromide, tert-butyl bromide, and magnesium metal in the presence of manganese(II) ions. Despite conditions amenable to the formation of a Grignard reagent, organomagnesium compounds are believed not to be the active species. Instead, they transmetalate to organomanganese compounds, which then decompose to tert-butyl radicals, which dimerize.

The full IUPAC name of the compound is 2,2,3,3-tetramethylbutane, but the numbers are superfluous in this case because there is no other possible arrangement of "tetramethylbutane".

References

References

  1. (26 March 2005). "Hexamethylethane - Compound Summary". National Center for Biotechnology Information.
  2. (2020-07-29). "Protobranching as repulsion-induced attraction: a prototype for geminal stabilization". Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics.
  3. (1956). "Factors Influencing the Course and Mechanism of Grignard Reactions. XXII. The Reaction of Grignard Reagents with Alkyl Halides and Ketones in the Presence of Manganous Salts". Journal of Organic Chemistry.
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