Alkanes Flashcards

(107 cards)

1
Q

What is petroleum mainly made of?

A

Alkanes

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2
Q

What are alkanes?

A

Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons

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3
Q

What is the general formula of alkanes?

A

CnH2n+2

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4
Q

What are hydrocarbons?

A

Compounds that only contain carbon and hydrogen atoms

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5
Q

What is the definition of saturated?

A

There are only single bonds

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6
Q

What is the general formula of cycloalkanes?

A

CnH2n

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7
Q

What are the bonds like between the C and H bonds?

A

They are non-polar

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8
Q

What is petroleum?

A

It is a mixture of hydrocarbons ranging from small to long alkanes

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9
Q

What process allows the hydrocarbons in petroleum to be separated?

A

Fractional distillation

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10
Q

What happens to the van der Waals forces as the length of the chain increases?

A

As the chain length increases, the melting/boiling points increases which result in stronger van der Waals forces

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11
Q

Describe the fractional distillation process of petroleum

A
  • crude oil is vapourised at about 350 degrees C
  • the vapourised crude oil is passed into a fractionating column
  • it is hot at the bottom and cold at the top
  • the vapourised crude oil cools as it rises up the column
  • the molecules condense at their boiling points
  • larger molecules are collected lower down the column
  • molecules with the lowest boiling points are collected as gases at the top of the column
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12
Q

What does primary distillation produce?

A

Primary distillation produces useful substances that boil above 350 degrees C at atmospheric pressure

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13
Q

What happens to the products of primary distillation at high temperatures?

A

The substances decompose at high temperatures and have to be distilled at lower pressure

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14
Q

What is cracking?

A

Cracking is the breaking of long alkane chains into more useful shorter alkane and alkene chains

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15
Q

What is the general formula for alkenes?

A

CnH2n

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16
Q

What are the two types of cracking?

A

Thermal cracking

Catalytic cracking

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17
Q

Describe the conditions for thermal cracking?

A

High temperatures up to 1000 degrees C

High pressure up to 70atm

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18
Q

What are the products made from thermal cracking?

A

Alkenes

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19
Q

Give an example of what alkenes are used to make

A

Polymers

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20
Q

Describe the conditions for catalytic cracking

A

High temperature of about 450 degrees C
Low-pressure 1-2atm
Zeolite catalyst

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21
Q

What are the products made from catalytic cracking?

A

Motor fuels

Aromatic hydrocarbons

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22
Q

Why is zeolite used?

A

Zeolite has a honeycomb structure and an enormous surface area

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23
Q

Why is a catalyst used?

A

Catalysts cut costs because lower conditions can be used(temperature/pressure) saving energy
The reaction is speeded up which saves time

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24
Q

What are the economic reasons for cracking?

A
  • products of cracking are more valuable

- shorter alkane chains are in more demand than longer alkane chains

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25
Describe how the zeolite catalyst works
- A zeolite catalyst has sites which remove a hydrogen from the alkane along with the 2 electrons in the bond - This leaves a positive charge on the carbon atom(carbocation)
26
What makes alkanes great fuels?
Burning a small amount releases a large amount of energy
27
What is complete combustion?
Complete combustion occurs when alkanes are burnt with plenty of oxygen
28
What are the products of complete combustion?
Carbon dioxide | Water
29
What is the equation for the combustion of propane?
C3H8(g) + 5O2 -> 3CO2(g) + 4H2O(g)
30
What is incomplete combustion?
Incomplete combustion occurs when alkanes burn with a limited supply of oxygen
31
What are the products of incomplete combustion?
Carbon(soot) | carbon monoxide
32
What are the problems caused by burning crude oil?
Carbon monoxide(poisonous gas) is produced Nitrogen oxides are formed Acid rain(sulfuric acid,nitrogen oxides) Photochemical smog(nitrogen oxides, greenhouse gases) Particulates Greenhouse gases
33
Give examples of greenhouse gases
Water vapour Carbon dioxide Methane
34
What is the equation for nitrogen oxide?
N2(g) + O2(g) -> 2NO(g)
35
What is the equation for sulfuric acid?
SO2 + H2O -> H2SO3 + 0.5O2 -> H2SO4
36
What problems can particulates cause?
Cancer | Asthma
37
How does acid rain affect the environment?
Vegetation and trees are destroyed Buildings and statues are corroded Marine life is killed because of the acidic conditions
38
How can sulfur be removed from flues?
Calcium oxide or limestone are now used in flues to absorb sulfur dioxide
39
What salt is formed when the sulfur reacts with the calcium compounds?
Calcium sulfate
40
What is the process of removing sulfur from flues called?
Flue gas desulfurisation
41
What is the greenhouse effect?
The greenhouse effect is the absorption of infrared energy by greenhouse gases and trapping them in the Earth's atmosphere keeping it warm
42
What is global warming?
Global warming is the increase in the Earth's temperature ,due to what most scientists believe to be caused by the increase in the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
43
why is infra-red radiation important?
It is important as it heats up the Earth or else it would be too cold and life couldn't be sustained
44
Why does the concentration of water vapour in the atmosphere stay roughly the same?
This is because of the equilibrium that exists between water and water vapour
45
Why are catalytic converters important?
They remove unburnt hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen from the exhaust
46
Describe catalytic converters
- ceramic material coated with platinum and rhodium metals which act as catalysts - honeycomb structure which provides an enormous surface area
47
What is the equation involving carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide passing through a catalytic converter?
2CO(g) + 2NO(g) -> N2(g) + 2CO2(g)
48
What is the equation involving a hydrocarbon and nitrogen oxide passing through a catalytic converter?
hydrocarbon + nitrogen oxide -> nitrogen + carbon dioxide + water e.g. C8H18 + 25NO ->12.5N2 + 8CO2 + 9H2O
49
What would happen to the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere if the temperature increased?
The amount of water vapour would increase resulting in an increase of the greenhouse effect
50
What is a haloalkane?
An alkane with halogen atoms
51
What type of bond is there between a carbon and a halogen?
A polar bond
52
Why is the bond between carbon and a halogen polar?
Halogens are more electronegative than carbon
53
Where is the delta positive charge in a carbon-halogen bond?
On the carbon
54
What is the delta positive carbon atom susceptible to?
Nucleophiles
55
What is a nucleophile?
A nucleophile is an electron pair donor
56
Which are the only nucleophiles to react with haloalkanes?
OH- CN- NH3
57
What happens to the bond between a carbon-halogen as you go down group 7?
The bond becomes less polar as the electronegativity decreases
58
What are the main intermolecular forces in haloalkanes?
Dipole-dipole attractions | van der Waals forces
59
Why are haloalkanes not soluble in water?
They are not polar enough
60
What happens to the boiling point as you go down the halogen group?
The boiling point increases
61
Why do haloalkanes have higher boiling point than similar chained alkanes?
They have higher relative molecular mass | They are more polar
62
What is a free radical?
A particle with an unpaired electron
63
When are free radicals formed?
When a covalent bond splits
64
In what two ways can a covalent bond break?
Homolytic fission | Heterolytic fission
65
What is homolytic fission?
The covalent bonds breaks equally and each atom/molecule gets one electron
66
What is heterolytic fission?
The covalent bond breaks unequally and one atom /molecule gets both electrons and the other none
67
How can a free radical in a mechanism be shown?
Using a dot
68
What property does the unpaired electron give to the atom/molecule?
It makes them very reactive
69
In what types of reactions do halogens react with alkanes?
Photochemical reactions
70
What are photochemical reactions?
Reactions started by UV light
71
What is a free radical substitution reaction?
A reaction where a hydrogen is replaced by a halogen
72
What is a reaction mechanism?
A series of steps that show what happens in a chemical reaction
73
What is photodissocation?
When the sun provides enough energy to break a bond
74
What are the three steps in free radical substitution?
Initiation Propagation Termination
75
What happens during the initiation reaction?
Free radicals are formed e.g. Cl2 --> 2Cl(free radicals) The bond splits equally
76
What happens during the propagation reaction?
free radicals are used up and created in a chain reaction CH4 + Cl(radical) --> HCl + CH3(radical) CH3(radical) +Cl2--> CH3Cl + Cl(radical) All propagation steps have a free radical in the reactants and products
77
What happens in the termination reaction?
When 2 free radicals collide, the chain reaction is terminated as the radicals make a stable molecule CH3Cl(radical) + Cl(radical) --> CH3Cl
78
What are CFCs?
Chlorofluorocarbons that contain no hydrogen | Hydrogen atoms are replaced by chlorine and flourine atoms
79
Why were CFCs used for refrigerators, air conditions and aerosols?
They have low reactivity, low volatility and non-toxic
80
What is the ozone layer?
A layer in the upper atmosphere that filters out much of the Sun's harmful UV radiation
81
What is the equation that shows the formation and depletion of the ozone layer?
O + O2 O3 | Reversible reaction
82
Why is there a constant amount of ozone in the atmosphere?
The rate of formation = the rate of depletion
83
What is the formula for the ozone formation?
O2 + UV --> O(radical) + O(radical)
84
What is the formula for the ozone depletion?
O3 +UV --> O2 + O
85
Radicals from what can affect the breakdown of the ozone layer?
Thunderstorms Aircraft CFCs NOx
86
How can one regenerated chlorine atom destroy thousands of ozone molecules?
Chlorine free radicals catalyse the decomposition of the ozone as they provide an alternative route with a lower activation energy
87
Why were CFCs banned?
They were destroying the ozone layer
88
What did chemists develop as a safer alternative to CFCs?
HFCs- hydrofluorocarbon | They contain no chlorine
89
What problems can UV radiation cause?
Skin cancer | Sunburn
90
What is a nucleophilic substitution reaction?
A reaction where a nucleophile reacts with a polar molecule by kicking out the functional group and taking its place
91
What do curly arrows in a nucleophilic substitution reaction show?
The movement of electron pairs
92
How does a nucleophilic substitution reaction work?
- The lone pair of electrons on the nucleophile attack the delta positive carbon and the carbon-halogen bond breaks - The halogen leaves taking both electrons with it - A new bond forms between the carbon and nucleophile
93
What is formed when haloalkanes react with hydroxides?
Alcohols | for example, bromoethane can react to form ethanol
94
What is nucleophilic substitution sometimes called?
Hydrolysis
95
What is hydrolysis?
Splitting a molecule apart by reacting it with water
96
What is formed when cyanide reacts with haloalkanes?
Nitrile
97
What is formed when haloalkanes react with ammonia?
Amines
98
What factor decides the reactivity in haloalkanes?
The bond enthalpy
99
Which haloalkane bnd has the highest bond enthalphy?
C-F bond | they undergo nucleophilic substitution more slowly
100
What happens to the speed of the substitution as the bond enthalphy decreases?
The substitution is faster as it is easier to break the bonds
101
what would happen if you warm a haloalkane with excess ethanoic ammonia?
The ammonia swaps places with the halogen
102
What can the amine group in the product of the reaction do?
The amine group has a lone pair of electrons and can act as a nucleophile
103
What other types of reaction can haloalkanes also undergo?
Elimination reactions
104
What happens if you warm a haloalkane with hydroxide ions in ethanol?
An alkene is formed
105
How does the elimination reaction with ethanol and haloalkane work?
e.g. CH3CHBrCH3 + OH- --> CH2CHCH3 + H2O + Br- OH- acts as a base and takes a proton, H+, from a carbon and forms water The carbon has a spare electron and forms a double bond with the next carbon To form the bond, the carbon has to let go of the Br which becomes a Br- ion
106
In aqueous conditions, what type of reaction happens between haloalkanes and hydroxides?
Nucleophilic substitution | OH- acts as a nucleophile
107
In anhydrous conditions, what type of reaction happens between haloalkanes and hydroxides?
Elimination | OH- acts as a base