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Potassium permanganate and hexane do not react because hexane is an alkane and therefore has no double bonds. Hexene on the other hand is an alkene and can indeed react with potassium permanganate.
C6H12 + Cl2 --> C6H12Cl2
Undecane - C11H243-methyl-4-propylheptane
Yes: cis-3-hexene and trans-3-hexene.
bromine water? The reaction between hexene, bromine, and water is an addition reaction.
Potassium permanganate and hexane do not react because hexane is an alkane and therefore has no double bonds. Hexene on the other hand is an alkene and can indeed react with potassium permanganate.
C6H12 + Cl2 --> C6H12Cl2
depends on the ratio and conditions really, if there is enough you will make co2 water manganese 2,3 oxide and potassium oxide if not you will make c2 h2 o2 or some other partially oxidized hydrocarbon
Undecane - C11H243-methyl-4-propylheptane
Yes: cis-3-hexene and trans-3-hexene.
The reaction is:C6H12 + 9 O2 = 6 CO2 + 6 H2O
bromine water? The reaction between hexene, bromine, and water is an addition reaction.
3-Hexene is an alkene reactant that can either be trans or cis. Br2 is a ragent and stands for Bromine. In order to know the reaction between 3-hexene and Br2 we have to know whether it is trans-3-hexene or cis-3-hexene.
Mixture of 2-hexene and 3-hexene
I suppose that trans-3-hexene is more stable because the boiling point is greater.
The position of double bond is different. CH3-CH=CH-CH2-CH2-CH3 is 2-hexene CH3-CH2-CH=CH-CH2-CH3 is 3-hexene
Hexene, C6H12, contains single bonds and 1 double bond