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🔵Aromatic vs Aliphatic📏

Organic compounds split into aromatic and aliphatic families. The defining feature is whether a special delocalized ring is present.

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🔵Aromatic
  • Contains a benzene-like delocalized ring
  • Extra stability from electron delocalization
  • Undergoes substitution to preserve the ring
  • Often has a distinctive odor
  • Examples: benzene, toluene, naphthalene
📏Aliphatic
  • Open chains or non-aromatic rings
  • No special ring stabilization
  • Includes alkanes, alkenes and alkynes
  • Undergoes addition or substitution
  • Examples: hexane, ethene, cyclohexane

Verdict

Aromatic compounds owe their stability to a delocalized ring of pi electrons; aliphatic compounds lack it. That stability makes aromatics resist addition reactions.

Frequently asked

What makes a ring aromatic?+

It must be cyclic, planar, fully conjugated and follow Hückel's rule (4n+2 pi electrons).

Is cyclohexane aromatic?+

No. It is a saturated ring with no delocalized pi system, so it is aliphatic.

Why do aromatics prefer substitution?+

Substitution keeps the stable aromatic ring intact, while addition would destroy it.

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