1.5- Organic chemistry Flashcards

0
Q

Define saturated and unsaturated?

A

Saturated: contains single carbon-carbon bonds only

Unsaturated: contains a carbon-carbon double bond

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1
Q

Define hydrocarbon?

A

Compound consisting of hydrogen and carbon only

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2
Q

Define petroleum fraction?

A

Mixture of hydrocarbons with a similar chain length and boiling point range

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3
Q

Define molecular formula?

A

Formula which shows the actual number of each type of atom

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4
Q

Define empirical formula?

A

Shows the simplest ratio of whole number of atoms of each element in the compound

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5
Q

Define general formula?

A

The algebraic formula for a homologous series e.g. CnH2n

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6
Q

Define displayed formula?

A

Show all the covalent bonds present in a molecule

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7
Q

Define homologous series?

A

Families of organic compounds with the same functional group and the same general formula

They show a gradual change in physical properties like boiling point

Each member differs by CH2 from the last

Same chemical properties

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8
Q

Define functional group?

A

An atom or group of atoms which when present in different molecules causes them to have similar properties

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9
Q

General formulae for alkanes, alkanes and haloalkanes?

A

Alkane- CnH2n+2
Alkene- CnH2n
Haloalkane- CnH2n+1X

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10
Q

What are structural isomers?

A

Compounds with the same molecular formulae but different structural formulae

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11
Q

Define chain isomerism?

A

Compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures of the carbon skeleton

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12
Q

Define positional isomerism?

A

Compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures due to different positions of the same functional group on the carbon skeleton

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13
Q

Define functional group isomerism?

A

Compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures due to atoms arranged to give different functional groups

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14
Q

What is petroleum/crude oil?

A

Mixture consisting of mainly alkane hydrocarbons

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15
Q

Explain the steps of fractional distillation?

A
  • Crude oil is preheated and vaporised and passed into the column
  • The fractions condense at different heights
  • The temperature of the column decreases upwards
  • The separation depends on the boiling point
  • Boiling point depends on the size of molecules
  • The larger the molecules the larger the van der Waals forces
  • Similar molecules condense together
  • small molecules condense at the top at lower temperatures and big molecules condense at the bottom at higher temperatures
16
Q

What is vacuum distillation?

A

It allows heavier fractions to be further separated without high temperatures which could break them down

Heavy residues from the fractionating column are distilled again under a vacuum

Lowering the pressure over a liquid will lower its boiling point

17
Q

What is cracking and what does it produce?

A

Conversion of large hydrocarbons into smaller molecules by breaking of C-C bonds

High Mr alkanes –> smaller Mr alkanes+ alkenes + (hydrogen)

18
Q

What are the economic reasons for cracking?

A

Shorter chain length petroleum fractions are more in demand

To make use of excess larger hydrocarbons

Products of cracking are more valuable than the starting materials

19
Q

What is thermal cracking?

A

High pressure (7000kPa) and high temperature (400-900°C)

Produces mostly alkenes (ethene used to make polythene and ethanol) and sometimes hydrogen (haber process and margarine manufacture)

20
Q

What is catalytic cracking?

A

Low pressure and high temperature (450°C) and zeolite catalyst

Produces branched and cyclic alkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons

Used to make motor fuels

21
Q

What is a fuel?

A

Something that releases energy when burnt

22
Q

What is complete and incomplete combustion?

A

Complete: in excess oxygen alkanes will burn in complete combustion producing CO2 and H2O

Incomplete: If there is a limited amount of oxygen then incomplete combustion occurs producing CO (toxic) and/or C (sooty flame)

23
Q

How is SO2 produced from burning fuels and what does it cause?

A

Sulphur impurities found in the petroleum fraction

Cause acid rain

24
Q

How can SO2 be removed?

A

Flue gas desulphurisation- waste gases pass through a scrubber containing basic calcium oxide which reacts with the acidic SO2 in a neutralisation reaction to produce Calcium sulphite

25
Q

How are nitrogen oxides produced and what do they cause?

A

Formed when N2 in the air reacts at high temperatures and spark in the engine

NO is toxic

NO2 causes acid rain

26
Q

What does CO2 contribute towards?

A

Global warming

27
Q

What do unburnt hydrocarbons cause?

A

Formation of smog

28
Q

What does soot cause?

A

Global dimming and respiratory problems

29
Q

What are catalytic converters?

A

Remove CO, NOx and unburnt hydrocarbons turning them into harmless CO2, N2 and H2O

Have ceramic honeycomb coated with a thin layer of catalyst metals platinum, palladium, rhodium to give a large surface area