Crude Oil

Cards (13)

  • What is crude oil?
    Mainly alkanes
  • How does fractional distillation work?
    Crude oil - vaporised at 350°C
    This crude oil moves to a fractionating column and rises up through the tray
    As the crude oil vapour goes up the fractionated column - cooler
    Each fraction condenses at different temperatures and they're all drawn off at different levels
  • What happens to the largest hydrocarbons?
    They don't vaporised at all and sink to the bottom to form residue as they have the largest boiling points
  • Why does it get colder at the top of the fractionating column?
    Alkane molecules have different chain lengths and then different boiling points
  • What happens to the hydrocarbons that have the lowest boiling points?
    They don't condense and are drawn off as gases at the top of the column
  • Heavy fractions can be ...... to make smaller hydrocarbons
    Cracked
  • Why do we crack heavier fractions?
    Due to high demand of lighter fractions - petrol
    Alkane - alkane + alkene
  • Thermal cracking
    High temp (up to 1000°C)
    Produces a lot of alkenes
    Alkenes make polymers
  • Catalytic cracking
    Zeolite catalyst
    Slight pressure
    High temp (450°)
    Mostly produces aromatic hydrocarbons and motor fuels
  • What can alkanes be reformed into?
    Cycloalkanes ans aromatic hydrocarbons
  • What is knocking?
    Alkanes explode on their own when the fuel/ air mixture in the engine is compressed
    Straight chain alkanes are most likely the hydrocarbons causing this
  • Car - petrol etc
    Adding branched chains and cyclic hydrocarbons to petrol mixture makes knocking less likely to occur
    Combustion - more efficient
  • How can we convert straight chain alkanes into branched chain alkanes and cyclic hydrocarbons?
    Reforming
    Using a catalyst (platinum stuck on aluminium oxide)