1. Unsaturated hydrocarbons contain either double or triple bonds. How am I suppose to identify this from formulas through, other than drawing it out; is there a numerical formula to the subscripts?
1) CH2CHCl (3) CH3CH2CH3 (2) CH3CH2Cl (4) CH3CHCH2
You do not need numerical formulas to follow, at least for compounds this small. Example one would be an
alkene (double bonds between CH2 and CH, and a single bond between CH and Cl). How do I know this? For your purposes all you need to know is that carbon must have four bonds (if its formal charge is zero) to attain an octet, hydrogen must have one and
only one, and chlorine must have one and only one as well.
You don't even need Lewis structures to figure this out. Just think, starting with the methyl group CH2-, how many bonds must it have here? Well, we see it is bound to 2 hydrogens, so that's 4 total electrons shared. Well that's not 8! So we keep going. It's also bound to the carbon of the second methyl group CH-. OK now we have 6 shared electrons (2 electrons for each bond right!?). This isn't at it's octet yet. So this
must mean that the two carbons of CH2 and CH are doubly bound (carbon can have four bonds remember earlier!). So the correct way to draw this condensed structure is
CH2=CHCl, where the "=" indicates a double bond. Forget about lone pairs. With alkane molecules all you need to do is count bonds (2 electrons each) to see if each atom has its octet. The only time lone pairs come in is when you are dealing with alcohols (-OH) or amines (-NH2).
Hope that helps