Overview

The formation of carbon-carbon bonds leading to the creation of the carbon chain is the basis of organic chemistry. August Kekulé and Archibald Scott Couper independently developed this idea of carbon chain formation.

Hydrocarbons are the simplest organic compounds composed of carbons and hydrogens. Based on the bond order between carbons, the hydrocarbons are further classified into alkanes, alkenes, and alkynes. 

Alkanes are the simplest hydrocarbons with sp3 hybrid carbon atoms. These sp3 carbon atoms can form sigma bonds with sp3 orbitals of other carbon atoms or with the 1s atomic orbitals of hydrogen atoms. Since alkanes possess only single bonds between carbon atoms, they are also known as saturated hydrocarbons. The general formula of alkanes is CnH2n+2, indicating that for every "n" carbon atom, alkanes have "2n+2" hydrogen atoms.

The Lewis structure of alkanes can be simplified using the condensed structural formula. In this representation, bonds between carbon-hydrogen and carbon-carbon are omitted to simplify the structure. Further simplification is done with the help of the line-angle formula. The lines represent carbon-carbon bonds. The line end and vertex represent the carbon atoms. The hydrogens are not explicitly shown and are assumed to be present, satisfying the carbon valency.

Procedure

Compounds containing carbon and hydrogen atoms are called hydrocarbons. The simplest hydrocarbon, methane, has a tetravalent carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms.

If one of the hydrogen atoms of methane is replaced with a carbon atom bonded to three hydrogen atoms, the next hydrocarbon, ethane, is formed.

Methane and ethane belong to the family of hydrocarbons called alkanes. Since alkanes contain only single covalent bonds, they are saturated hydrocarbons.

In any alkane, for example ethane, the carbon atoms are sp3 hybridized, making them tetrahedral carbons. These singly occupied hybrid orbitals overlap with the sp3 hybrid orbitals of the neighboring carbon atom to form a carbon-carbon sigma bond.

The other hybrid orbitals of carbon form sigma bonds with the 1s orbitals of each of the hydrogen atoms. The bonded atoms are at an angle of 109.5° to each other.

Examine the structures of three simple alkanes — methane, ethane, and propane. Methane, CH4, has one carbon and four hydrogen atoms; ethane, C2H6, has two carbons and six hydrogen atoms; and propane, C3H8, has three carbons and eight hydrogen atoms.

Notice that each succeeding formula has one carbon and two hydrogens — namely, a CH2 group more than the preceding formula.

In general, for every n number of carbon atoms, there will be 2n+2 hydrogen atoms. Thus, alkanes have the characteristic molecular formula: CnH2n+2.

A condensed structural formula simplifies the Lewis structure of alkanes by omitting the bonds to hydrogens or even carbon-carbon bonds.

Hydrocarbons can also be represented using line-angle or skeletal structures. The lines denote carbon-carbon bonds, with each vertex and endpoint implying a carbon atom. The hydrogens, although not explicitly shown, are assumed to be bonded to the carbons, satisfying their valency.