Chemical Bonding

Molecular Coplanarity: When Atoms Share a Plane

Understand why certain atoms in a molecule lie in the same plane. Covers sp² hybridisation, conjugated systems, benzene delocalisation, and how to identify coplanar atoms in exam questions.

V
Vectora Team
STEM Education
7 min read
2026-02-15

What Is Molecular Coplanarity?

Coplanarity means that a set of atoms all lie in the same geometric plane. In chemistry, this is directly linked to the type of hybridisation and bonding around each atom.

The key principle: sp2sp^2 hybridised atoms and their directly bonded atoms are coplanar, because the three sp2sp^2 orbitals point to the corners of a flat triangle (120°120°). The unhybridised pp orbital sits perpendicular to this plane, allowing π\pi bond formation.

Learning Goals: By the end of this guide, you should be able to:

  1. Identify which atoms in a molecule are coplanar.
  2. Explain coplanarity using hybridisation theory.
  3. Determine the maximum number of coplanar atoms in a molecule.
  4. Recognise coplanarity in conjugated and aromatic systems.

Why Does sp2sp^2 Mean Planar?

HybridisationGeometryPlanar?
sp3sp^3Tetrahedral (109.5°109.5°)No — atoms point in 3D
sp2sp^2Trigonal planar (120°120°)Yes — all in one plane
spspLinear (180°180°)Yes — by definition

When a carbon is sp2sp^2 hybridised (e.g., in a C=CC=C double bond), it and all three atoms bonded to it lie in the same plane. The π\pi bond locks this arrangement — rotation is prevented.


Identifying Coplanar Atoms

Step-by-Step Method

  1. Find all sp2sp^2 (or spsp) hybridised atoms — these define the plane.
  2. All atoms directly bonded to an sp2sp^2 carbon are also in that plane.
  3. If two adjacent carbons are both sp2sp^2, their planes merge into one continuous plane.
  4. sp3sp^3 carbons break the plane — atoms bonded to sp3sp^3 carbons are NOT coplanar with the rest.

Example: Ethene (C2H4C_2H_4)

Both carbons are sp2sp^2. All 6 atoms (2C + 4H) are coplanar.

Example: Propene (CH3CH=CH2CH_3CH=CH_2)

  • C2C_2 and C3C_3 are sp2sp^2 → coplanar with each other and their bonded H atoms
  • C1C_1 (CH3CH_3) is sp3sp^3 → the 3 H atoms on C1C_1 are NOT coplanar with the rest
  • Coplanar atoms: C1C_1, C2C_2, C3C_3, plus the H atoms on C2C_2 and C3C_3 — but NOT the H atoms on C1C_1

Wait — C1C_1 itself IS in the plane (it's directly bonded to sp2sp^2 C2C_2), but the H atoms hanging off the sp3sp^3 C1C_1 can rotate and are not fixed in the plane.

Coplanarity Visualiser

See which atoms share a plane in 3D. Toggle the planar highlight to instantly identify coplanar and non-coplanar atoms in any molecule.
Explore Coplanarity in 3D

Coplanarity in Special Systems

Benzene (C6H6C_6H_6)

All 12 atoms are coplanar. Each carbon is sp2sp^2, and the delocalised π\pi system requires all pp orbitals to be parallel — which only works if all atoms are in the same plane.

Conjugated Dienes (CH2=CHCH=CH2CH_2=CH-CH=CH_2)

All 4 carbons and their bonded atoms are coplanar. Conjugation requires continuous pp orbital overlap, which demands planarity.

Amide Bond (CONH-CO-NH-)

The nitrogen in an amide is sp2sp^2 (not sp3sp^3) due to resonance with the C=OC=O. This makes the amide group planar — essential for protein structure.


Worked Examples

Example 1: How Many Coplanar Atoms in But-2-ene?

CH3CH=CHCH3CH_3CH=CHCH_3: C2C_2 and C3C_3 are sp2sp^2. They and their bonded atoms (HH on C2C_2, HH on C3C_3, C1C_1, C4C_4) are coplanar. Maximum coplanar = 6 atoms (C1C_1, C2C_2, C3C_3, C4C_4, HH on C2C_2, HH on C3C_3).

Example 2: Is Cyclohexane Planar?

No. All carbons are sp3sp^3 (109.5°109.5°), so cyclohexane adopts a chair conformation — not planar. But cyclohexene (with one C=CC=C) has a partially flattened shape near the double bond.


Common Mistakes

  1. Assuming all atoms in a molecule must be coplanar — Only atoms around sp2sp^2 or spsp centres are forced into a plane. sp3sp^3 centres create 3D arrangements.

  2. Forgetting that atoms bonded to sp2sp^2 are ALSO in the plane — It's not just the sp2sp^2 atom itself — its three directly bonded atoms are coplanar too.

  3. Not recognising amide planarity — The N in CONH–CONH– is sp2sp^2 due to resonance, making the peptide bond planar. This is critical for protein structure.


Exam Tips

  • When asked "which atoms are coplanar?", identify sp2sp^2 carbons first, then include all atoms directly bonded to them.
  • For "maximum number of coplanar atoms", trace the continuous sp2sp^2 chain including their bonded atoms.
  • Benzene: all 12 atoms are coplanar. This is almost always the expected answer.