Organic Chemistry

    Cards (31)

    • crude oil is a finite resource found in rocks
    • crude oil comes from plankton
    • crude oil is a mixture of a very large number of compounds
    • most compounds in crude oil are hydrocarbons
    • hydrocarbons are molecules made up of only hydrogen and carbon atoms
    • most hydrogens in crude oil are alkanes
    • formula for alkanes: CnH2n+2
    • alkanes are a group of hydrocarbons
    • the first 4 alkanes are methane, ethane, propane and butane
    • alkane molecules can be represented as C2H6
    • hydrocarbons in crude oil can be separated into fractions
    • each fraction of hydrocarbons contains molecules with a similar number of carbon atoms
    • fractions can be used to produce fuels or feedstock
    • fuels that we depend on include, petrol, diesel, oil, kerosene
    • useful materials produced by the petrochemical industry include:
      • solvents,
      • lubricants
      • polymers
      • detergents
    • fractional distillation for crude oil practical:
      • oil is heated until most of it turns into a gas
      • these gases enter fractional columns
      • longer chains of hydrocarbons have high boiling points
      • shorter chains of hydrocarbons have lower boiling points
      • the crude oil is now separated out into different fractions
      • longer chains of hydrocarbons condense into liquids early on
      • shorter chains of hydrocarbons condense into liquids later on
    • a hydrocarbons properties depend on the length of the hydrocarbon
    • the shorter the chain of hydrocarbons, the more runny the hydrocarbon is, so it is less viscous
    • shorter hydrocarbons are more volatile so it is easily evapourated
    • shorter hydrocarbons are more flammable
    • the combustion of hydrocarbons releases energy
    • during the combustion of hydrocarbons, the carbon and hydrogen atoms are oxidised
    • the oxidation of hydrocarbons:
      hydrocarbon + oxygen  → carbon dioxide + water
    • cracking is when long chains of hydrocarbons are broken down to produce smaller and more useful chains
    • methods of cracking:
      • catalytic cracking
      • steam cracking
    • the products of cracking are alkanes and alkenes
    • alkenes are more reactive than alkanes
    • to test for alkenes you add bromine water and heat the mixture
    • bromine water test for alkenes:
      • when orange bromine water is added to alkanes, no reaction happens and the solution stays orange
      • when orange bromine water is added to alkenes, a colourless compound is formed
    • cracking is useful because there is a high demand for fuels with small molecules
    • alkenes are produced because they produce polymers
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