DF - Catalysts Flashcards

1
Q

What does a catalyst do?

A

Increases the rate of a reaction by providing an alternative reaction pathway with a lower activation energy. The catalyst is chemically unchanged at the end of the reaction.

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2
Q

What is catalysis?

A

Speeding up a chemical reaction by using a catalyst.

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3
Q

When is an iron catalyst used?

A

In the haber process to make ammonia.

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4
Q

What type of chain hydrocarbons are more useful?

A

Short chain.

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5
Q

How can long chain hydrocarbons be turned into short chain hydrocarbons?

A

Broken up in the cracking process.

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6
Q

How are the products of cracking determined?

A

It is random and the same molecule can give different cracking products.

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7
Q

What would the consequences be for cracking is a catalyst wasn’t used?

A

It requires extremely high temperatures and pressures making it expensive.

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8
Q

How does cracking take place?

A

By passing hydrocarbon vapour over a heated solid catalyst.

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9
Q

What are the benefits of passing hydrocarbon vapour over a heated solid catalyst for the cracking process?

A

Cracking can take place at much lower temperatures (around 450 degrees celsius) and pressures, saving a lot of money.

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10
Q

What are heterogeneous catalysts?

A

Catalysts in a different physical state from the reactants.

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11
Q

What catalyst is used in the haber process?

A

Iron.

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12
Q

Why is iron a heterogeneous catalyst in the haber process?

A

Iron is a solid and the reactants are hydrogen gas and nitrogen gas.

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13
Q

What is platinum catalyst used in?

A

Catalytic converters.

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14
Q

What type of catalyst do catalytic converters use?

A

Heterogeneous platinum catalysts.

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15
Q

What do catalytic converters do?

A

Stop pollutants coming out of the engine. They turn them to harmless gases like water vapour and nitrogen, or to less harmful ones like carbon dioxide.

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16
Q

How do heterogeneous catalysts work?

A

The reactions happen on the solid catalyst. They can provide a surface for a reaction to take place on.

17
Q

How does a reaction take place on a heterogeneous catalyst?

A

Reactant molecules arrive at the surface and bond with the solid catalyst. This is called adsorption.

The bonds between the reactant’s atoms are weakened and break up. This forms radicals - atoms or molecules with unpaired electrons. These radicals then get together and make new molecules.

The new molecules are then detached from the catalyst. This is called desorption.

18
Q

What is it called when the reactant molecules arrive at the surface and bond with the solid catalyst?

A

Adsorption.

19
Q

What is the first stage in how a heterogeneous catalyst works?

A

Adsorption.

20
Q

What is it called when the new molecules are then detached from the catalyst?

A

Desorption.

21
Q

What does it mean if a catalyst becomes poisoned?

A

They don’t work anymore.

22
Q

What poisons the iron catalyst in the haber process?

A

CO

23
Q

What poisons the catalyst in catalytic converters?

A

Lead (but now we get unleaded petrol).

24
Q

Why do heterogeneous catalysts get poisoned?

A

Because the poison clings to the catalysts surface more strongly than the reactant does. So the catalyst is prevented from getting involved in the reaction it’s meant to be speeding up.