[12.1] properties of alkanes Flashcards

1
Q

what are alkanes?

A
  • a homologous series of saturated hydrocarbons
  • its general formula is CₙH₂ₙ₊₂
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2
Q

what are common uses of the first twenty members of the alkane homologous series?

A
  • gas, used in domestic fuel (C1,3,4)
  • petrol, used in cars (C5-C9)
  • kerosene, used in aircraft (C10-C16)
  • diesel, used in cars and lorries (C12-C20)
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3
Q

why are alkanes used as fuels?

A
  • readily available
  • easy to transport
  • burn in a plentiful supply of oxygen without releasing toxic products
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4
Q

what is a sigma bond? (σ-bond)

A
  • it is the result of a direct overlap of two orbitals, one from each bonding atom
  • each overlapping orbital contains one electron, so the σ-bond has two electrons that are shared between the bonding atoms
  • (eg.) methane has four sigma bonds
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5
Q

what is the shape of alkanes?

A
  • each carbon atom is surrounded by four electron pairs in four σ-bonds
  • there is a tetrahedral arrangement and each bond angle is 109.5°
  • the σ-bonds act as axes around which the atoms can rotate freely, so these shapes are not rigid
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6
Q

what is the process of fractional distillation?

A
  • oil refineries separate crude oil into fractions (hydrocarbons with similar boiling points) by fractional distillation in a distillation tower
  1. crude oil is vaporised at high temperatures, and passed into a tower, which is hot at the bottom and cold at the top
  2. as it rises up the tower it condenses at different levels
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7
Q

how is fractional distillation possible?

A

because the boiling points of the alkanes are different, increasing as their chain length increases

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8
Q

what happens to hydrocarbons as the C chain gets longer?

A
  • more viscous
  • harder to ignite
  • less volatile
  • have higher boiling points
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9
Q

what is the purpose of cracking?

A
  • petroleum fractions with shorter C chains (eg. petrol) are in more demand than larger fractions
  • longer hydrocarbons are therefore cracked by breaking the C-C bonds
  • the products of cracking are more valuable than the starting materials
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10
Q

what are the conditions and products of thermal cracking?

A
  • temperature: 900°c
  • pressure: 70 atm
  • catalyst: none
  • products: alkenes
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11
Q

what are the conditions and products of catalytic cracking?

A
  • temperature: 450°c
  • pressure: 1-2 atm
  • catalyst: zeolites
  • products: motor fuels, aromatics, cycloalkanes, branched alkanes
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12
Q

what is the effect of chain length on the boiling point of alkanes?

A
  • london forces act between molecules that are in close surface contact
  • as chain length increases, the molecules have a larger surface area, so more surface contact is possible between molecules
  • london forces between the molecules will be greater and so more energy is required to overcome the forces, resulting in a higher boiling point
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13
Q

what is the effect of branching on the boiling point of alkanes?

A
  • branched alkanes have fewer surface points of contact between molecules so there are fewer london forces, so have a lower boiling point than a straight chain alkane
  • branches of branched molecules also get in the way and prevent branched molecules getting as close together as straight chain molecules, decreasing the intermolecular forces further
  • less branching allows closer contact between molecules and so stronger london forces

> more branching = less surface area of contact = weaker london forces

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