Crude Oil & Fractional Distillation

Cards (9)

  • Crude Oil:
    • Crude oil is a finite resource which we find in the Earth's crust
    • It is also called petroleum and is a complex mixture of hydrocarbons which also contains natural gas
    • Hydrocarbons are compounds that are made of carbon and hydrogen atoms only
  • Crude Oil:
    • The hydrocarbon molecules in crude oil consist of a carbon backbone which can be in a ring or chain, with hydrogen atoms attached to the carbon atoms
    • The mixture contains molecules with many different ring sizes and chain lengths
    • It is a thick, sticky, black liquid that is found in porous rock (under the ground and under the sea)
    • Crude oil formed over millions of years from the effects of high pressures and temperatures on the remains of plants and animals
    • It is being used up much faster than it is being formed, which is why we say crude oil is a finite resource
  • Crude oil found under the sea:
  • Crude oil found under the sea:
  • Fractional Distillation:
    • Crude oil as a mixture is not a very useful substance but the different hydrocarbons that make up the mixture, called fractions, are enormously valuable, with each fraction having many different applications
    • Each fraction consists of groups of hydrocarbons of similar chain lengths
    • The fractions in petroleum are separated from each other in a process called fractional distillation
    • The molecules in each fraction have similar properties and boiling points, which depend on the number of carbon atoms in the chain
  • Fractional Distillation:
    • The size and length of each hydrocarbon molecule determines in which fraction it will be separated into
    • The size of each molecule is directly related to how many carbon and hydrogen atoms the molecule contains
    • Most fractions contain mainly alkanes, which are compounds of carbon and hydrogen with only single bonds between them
  • Diagram showing the process of fractional distillation to separate crude oil in a fractionating column:
    • Fractional distillation is carried out in a fractionating column which is very hot at the bottom and cool at the top
    • Crude oil enters the fractionating column and is heated so vapours rise
    • Vapours of hydrocarbons with very high boiling points will immediately condense into liquid at the higher temperatures lower down and are tapped off at the bottom of the column
    • Vapours of hydrocarbons with low boiling points will rise up the column and condense at the top to be tapped off
    • The different fractions condense at different heights according to their boiling points and are tapped off as liquids
    • The fractions containing smaller hydrocarbons are collected at the top of the fractionating column as gases
    • The fractions containing bigger hydrocarbons are collected at the lower sections of the fractionating column
    • As the size of the hydrocarbon increases, the boiling point increases because the intermolecular forces get stronger and require more energy to break