Organic (Y1) - Alkanes Flashcards
Learn the year 1 facts and knowledge on alkanes.
How do you refine crude oil?
Fractional distillation: industrially.
What is petroleum?
Petroleum is a mixture consisting of mainly alkane hydrocarbons.
Petroleum Fractions: Mixture of hydrocarbons with a similar chain length and boiling point range.
10 Key Points about fractional distillation (Try put these on a que card and learn them)
1) Oil is pre-heated.
2) Then passed into column.
3) The fractions condense at different heights.
4) The temperature of column decreases upwards.
5) The separation depends on boiling point.
6) Boiling point depends on the size of molecules.
7) The larger the molecule the larger the van der waals forces.
8) Similar molecules (size, bp, mass) condense together.
9) Small molecules condense at the top at the lower temperatures.
10) Big molecules condense at the bottom at higher temperatures.
What is fractional distillation in terms of VDWs forces?
Fractional distillation is a physical process involving the splitting of weak van der waals forces between molecules.
What is use of vacuum distillation unit?
Heavy residues from the fractionating column are distilled again under a vacuum. Lowering the pressure over a liquid will lower its boiling point.
What’s the point of vacuum distillation unit?
Vacuum distillation allows heavier fractions to be further separated without high temperatures which could break them down.
Describe the process of fractional distillation in the laboratory
1) Heat the flask with a bunsun burner/electric mantle.
2) Causes vapours of all the components in the mixture to be produced.
3) Vapours pass the fractionating column.
4) The vapour of the substance with the lower boiling point reaches the top of the fractionating column first.
5) The thermometer should be at or below the boiling point of the most volatile substance.
6) The vapours with higher boiling points condense back into the flask.
7) Only the most volatile vapour passes into the condenser.
8) The condenser coos the vapour and condenses to a liquid and is collected.
Define cracking
Conversion of large hydrocarbons to smaller hydrocarbon molecules by braking of c-c bonds.
Higher Mr alkanes -> smaller Mr alkanes + alkenes (+ hydrogen).
List 3 economic reasons for cracking
1) Petroleum fractions with shorter C chains (e.g. petrol and naphtha) are in MORE DEMAND than larger fractions.
2) To make use of excess larger HCs and to supply demand for shorter ones, longer HCs are cracked.
3) Products of cracking are MORE VALUABLE than starting materials (e.g. ethene used to make poly(ethene), branched alkanes for motor fuels etc.)
State the conditions of thermal cracking.
- High pressure (7000kPa)
- High temperature (400C to 900C)
What is mostly produced from thermal cracking?
- Produce mostly alkenes e.g. ethene used for making polymers and ethanol.
- Sometimes produces hydrogen used in the Haber process and margarine manufacture.
Can you think some example equations - for example what are the products of C8H18 & Products of C12H26
C6H14 + C2H4
C10H22 + C2H4
Bonds can be broken anywhere in the molecule by C-C bond fission and C-H Bond fission
State the conditions of catalytic cracking
- Slight/moderate pressure
- High temperature (450C)
- Zeolite catalyst
What’s mostly produced from catalytic cracking?
Produces branched and cyclic alkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons.
Use of Catalytic cracking?
Used for making motor fuels.