Fuels and Atmosphere

Cards (24)

  • What is crude oil primarily composed of?
    Hydrocarbons
  • How is crude oil formed?
    From the remains of ancient dead marine organisms over millions of years
  • What type of resource is crude oil classified as?
    Finite resource
  • Why is crude oil considered a finite resource?
    Because it forms extremely slowly over millions of years and cannot quickly be replaced
  • What are two important uses of crude oil?
    Fuels and feedstock for the petrochemical industry
  • What is a feedstock?
    A raw material used to provide reactants for an industrial reaction
  • What is a petrochemical?
    A substance made from crude oil using chemical reactions
  • How is ethene produced from crude oil used in industry?
    As feedstock to make poly(ethene)
  • What is a polymer?
    A large molecule formed from many identical smaller molecules known as monomers
  • What is the significance of the ball and stick models in understanding hydrocarbons?
    They visually represent the arrangement of carbon and hydrogen atoms in hydrocarbons
  • What are the main components of crude oil and their characteristics?
    • Mixture of hydrocarbons
    • Mainly alkanes
    • Formed from ancient marine organisms
    • Complex mixture of carbon and hydrogen atoms
  • What are the environmental and health concerns associated with combustion products of fuels?
    • Air pollution
    • Greenhouse gas emissions
    • Health risks from inhalation
  • What are the properties of fraction hydrocarbons?

    Fraction hydrocarbons have varying boiling points, densities, and viscosities based on their molecular size and structure.
  • What does viscosity mean?

    How difficult it is for a substance to flow
  • A homologous series is a series compounds that have the same functional group, similar chemical properties and the same general formula
  • The formula for alkanes is CnH2n+2
  • The first four alkanes are Methane Ethane Propane and Butane
  • As the number of carbon atoms increases:
    • the intermolecular forces between alkane molecules become stronger
    • more energy is needed to overcome these forces
    • the boiling point increases
  • Hydrocarbon + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water is the equation for complete combustion
  • What does incomplete combustion produce?

    Carbon monoxide and soot
  • Incomplete combustion happens when there is not enough oxygen
  • Sulfur dioxide is produced because sulfur is an impurity in the hydrocarbon fuel that oxidises
  • Nitrogen oxide is produced because of high temperatures of burning fuel in engines which makes nitrogen react with oxygen in the air
  • Nitrogen oxide and Sulfur dioxide rise up to clouds to produce acid rain