crude oil
crude oil is a fossil fuel that can be extracted from the ground and processed to make fuels and feedstock
crude oil is formed from decomposed plants and plankton and heated under pressure for millions of years
Fractional distillation -process of separating different hydrocarbons in crude oil into more useful fractions
fractional distillation process
crude oil is heated
enters distillation column
hot at bottom, cools towards top
this causes the various factions to separate based on their boiling point
order of factions= petroleum gases, petrol, kerosene, diesel, fuel oil and bitumen
petroleum gases have the shortest chain length, lowest boiling point, lowest viscosity
bitumen has the longest chain length, the highest boiling point, the highest viscosity
petroleum can be used for barbecues, and domestic heating
petrol can be used for car fuel and farming equipment
kerosene can be used for planes and domestic cooking
diesel can be used for heavy machinery and various vehicle fuel
fuel oil can be used for heating and farming.
bitumen can be used for tarmac, roofing and water proofing
hydrocarbons- are molecules containing hydrogen and carbon ONLY
functional group = part of molecule that determines how the molecule will react
Alkanes
type of hydrocarbon
alkanes are saturated
unreactive
all conform to general formula of CnH2n+2
Alkane examples - methane (CH4), ethane (C2H6), propane (C3H8), butane (C4H10)
Alkenes
formed by cracking larger alkanes into smaller ones
unsaturated (has a double bond)
important in formation of polymers and feedstock
very reactive known as addition reactions
test for alkenes is to add bromine water (+’ive results is colour change to colourless)
all conform to general formula of CnH2n
Alkene examples - ethene (C2H4), propene (C3H6), butene (C4H8), pentene (C5H10)
Combustion
Complete combustion of an alkene: alkane + oxygen —> carbon dioxide + water
Incomplete combustion of an alkene: alkane + oxygen —> carbon monoxide + water
note: carbon monoxide is toxic (binds to haemoglobin better than oxygen and suffocates)
complete combustion of an alcohol: alcohol + oxygen —> carbon dioxide + water
Alcohols
functional group = O-H
general formula = CnH2n+2O
(alcohols have the same numbering system as alkenes and alkanes)
ethanol - (CH4O) can be used for cleaning products, drinking, and combustion
when alcohols are oxidised it becomes carboxylic acid
production of alcohols
method 1: fermentation
yeast respires anaerobically using a sugar solution and produces ethanol and carbon dioxide
C6H12O6 —> 2C2H5OH+2CO2
advantages - sugar is renewable resource, occurs at atmospheric pressure, cheaper, carbon neutral
disadvantages- labour is intensive as it is a batch process, slow reaction
method 2: hydrolysis of ethene
ethene reacts with steam and it forms and alcohol
C2H4+H2O —> C2H5OH
advantages- faster and less intensive labour
disadvantages- specific conditions needed, more expensive, uses non-renewable resources
carboxylic acids
properties
functional group: OH-C=O + r
dissolves in water
3-5 Ph
reacts with Na
alcohol + carboxylic acid —> esters + water (condensation reaction)
Polymers!
monomer - single molecule used to make a polymer
polymer - molecule made from many monomers
repeating unit - unit that repeats in polymer chain
overall process
crude oil is extracted —> fractional distillation —> cracking —> polymers
addition polymers
alkenes under heat pressure and a catalyst (triggers double bond to break open and add molecules together
condensation polymers
dicarboxylic acid and di-ol
HDPE and LDPE
HDPE - pack chains close together, increases points of surface contact and results in stronger intermolecular forces and higher melting points
LDPE - chains are randomly arranged so few point of surface contact weaker forces of attraction so lower melting point
thermosetting and thermosoftening
thermosetting - strong cross links, so strong covalent bonds. high melting point
thermosoftening - weak forces so weaker intermolecular forces - low boiling point
amino acids
follows this arrangement : H2N-C-C=O. (and a -O off the second C)
What is crude oil?A fossil fuel that is extracted and processed to make various fuels and feedstock.
How is crude oil formed?From decomposed plants and plankton subjected to heat and pressure over millions of years.
What is fractional distillation?A process that separates hydrocarbons in crude oil into more useful fractions based on their boiling points.
List the order of fractions from crude oil based on boiling points.Petroleum gases, petrol, kerosene, diesel, fuel oil, bitumen.
What are alkanes?Saturated hydrocarbons that conform to the general formula CnH2n+2.
What is the functional group of alcohols?O-H. The general formula is CnH2n+2O.
What happens during complete combustion of an alkane? Alkane + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water.
What does fermentation produce?Ethanol and carbon dioxide from yeast and sugar.