Production of Materials 1-1.4 Flashcards

1
Q

What are fossil fuels and what are they used for?

A
  • Energy rich substances that are formed in the Earth’s crust millions of years ago from decomposing animal and plant matter.
  • Used to provide energy requirements for machinery, produce other forms of energy, produce complex materials with various uses.
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2
Q

How is petroleum formed?

A
  • Under intense heat and pressure, the remains of marine organisms are gradually converted into petroleum.
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3
Q

What is ethylene

A

(aka ethene) C2H4 is the simplest of the Alkene Homologous series. Saturated HC.

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4
Q

What is the process of fractional distillation

A

Separation of a liquid mixture into fractions based on different boiling points.
Each fraction will contain molecules of similar molecular weight.
1. crude oil is preheated before entering F.C
2. In the F.C there are many bubble caps on large trays which allow separation.
3. The most volatile components bubble through the caps and rise higher where it is cooler.
4. compounds separate as they go up due to different Bp ranges.
5. Fractions are drawn off at different levels to produce a variety of different compounds.

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5
Q

What is petroleum?

A

naturally occurring mixture of up to 300 HC as well as S and N compounds (usually crude oil but also natural gas)

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6
Q

How is ethene made

A

ethene doesn’t occur naturally so it must be made from other chemcials within petroleum and natural gas.
Physical and chemical changes can be used to separate out compounds and convert them into simpler molecules.
Fractional distillation produces fraction of 18-25C atoms/chain which ethene is manufactured from by thermal cracking.

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7
Q

what is cracking?

A

an endothermic process involving the breaking of covalent bonds of less useful longer chained HC to produce smaller chain alkanes and alkenes which are more useful.

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8
Q

describe the 2 types of cracking

A

THERMAL: heating heavier fractions @ very high temps (900C)
CATALYTIC: powdered zeolite catalyst (an Al silicate with attached metal ions) is used inside a cat cracker. Catalyst has an open cage like crystalline structure with high internal S.A on which the cracking process occurs. Catalyst allows energy saving as process occurs at lower temps (500C)

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9
Q

Equation of feedstocks to produce ethylene

A

C2H6 (g) –> C2H4 (g) + H2 (g)

C3H8 (g) –> C2H4 (g) + CH4 (g)

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10
Q

Equation for alkanes, alkenes and alkynes

A

Alkanes are saturated HC (contain only H and C atoms)
CnH2n+2
Alkenes are unsaturated HC (contain at least 1 C-C double bond) CnH2n
Alkynes are unsaturated HC (contain at least one C-C triple bond) CnH2n-2

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11
Q

Saturation

A

Unsaturated HC are fairly reactive due to their double bond

Saturated HC are inert

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12
Q

What is a homologous series

A

group of compounds with similar structure and chemical properties (e.g. meth, eth)

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13
Q

what is a functional group

A

a grouping of atoms that is common to all members of that series. (ending of name indicates functional group e.g. ane –> alkanes)

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14
Q

C1-8 name

A

1 meth , 2 eth, 3 prop, 4 but, 5 pent, 6 hex, 7 hep, 8 oct

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15
Q

Why is ethylene a useful starting point for producing industrial chemicals

A

the double bond in Ethylene allows it to react quickly and easily with other molecules.

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16
Q

Addition reactions

A

ALKENES ONLY
One of the bonds in the double bond breaks open and an atom is added to (bonded) with each of the C atoms.
E.g. C2H4 (g) + HCl (l) –> C2H5Cl(aq)
ethene + Hydrogen chloride –> chloroethane

17
Q

Oxidation of ethanol

A

ethanol is converted to ethanal (acetaldehyde) and acetic acid
CH3CH2OH –> CH3CHO –> CH3COOH (O2 is used as a catalyst)
Ethanal used in perfumes and flavours. Acetic acid used in food manufacturing such as vinegar.

18
Q

Substitution reactions

A

(single displacement reaction)
ALKANES ONLY
atom is substituted for another already in the molecule. Requires light energy (UV light). One functional group is replaced by another functional group.
e.g. ethane + chloride gas –> chloroethane + HCl

19
Q

Reactivity and saturation

A

Unsaturated HC (alkenes) are reactive. Saturated HC are not.

20
Q

Bromine water test

A
  • Bromine dissolved in H2O forms an equilibrium mixture of hypobromous acid.
    Br2 + H20 H+ + Br - +HOBR
    Alkenes will undergo an addition reaction and colour change from dark brown to colourless.
    CH2CH2 +HOBr –> CH2BRCH2OH (2-Bromoethanol)
    As HOBr is removed, more Br2 reacts with the water so its colour fades.
    Alkanes will undergo a substitution reaction which is very slow and no colour change will occur (stay brown)