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Organic Chemistry Revision

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Presentation on theme: "Organic Chemistry Revision"— Presentation transcript:

1 Organic Chemistry Revision

2 Crude Oil What is it? How is it formed? Where is it found?

3 Fractional Distillation – making crude oil useful
Crude oil is heated to make it vaporise Vapour goes into the fractioning column The vapour is cooled Different fractions of the oil condense and are collected at different temperatures As the length of the hydrocarbon chain increases, the boiling point and viscosity also increase. Flammability and volatility decrease.

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5 Alkanes Alkanes are a homologous series.
Members of a homologous series have similar properties and can be represented by a general formula For alkanes, the formula is CnH2n+2

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7 Properties of alkanes The first four (methane – butane) are gases at RTP As the number of carbon atoms increases, the melting points, boiling points and densities increase 5-17 C atoms = liquids 18+ C atoms = solids C-C bonds and C-H bonds are very strong, so alkanes are not very reactive But – will combust. Very exothermic!

8 Complete and incomplete combustion
Hydrocarbon + oxygen  carbon dioxide + water Happens when there is plenty of air. Incomplete: Hydrocarbon + oxygen  carbon monoxide + carbon + water Happens when air is restricted

9 Alkenes Alkanes are a homologous series.
For alkenes, the general formula is CnH2n

10 Properties of alkenes Have a carbon-carbon double bond
As the number of carbon atoms increases, the melting points, boiling points and densities increase Combust like alkanes but burn with sootier flames due to their higher carbon : hydrogen ratio More reactive than alkanes – why? Unsaturated

11 Cracking Why? – Supply and demand Process = thermal decomposition
Products = alkane + alkene(s) Conditions needed: heat ( degrees), catalyst (mixture of silicon dioxide and aluminium oxide)

12 Addition Polymerisation
What is a polymer? Addition reaction = 2 or more molecules join together to give a single product Example ethene  poly(ethene) or polythene Conditions: 200 degrees C 2000atm

13 Condensation Polymerisation
Example = nylon Similar to addition, but the formation of a condensation polymer is accompanied by the release of an additional small molecule (such as?) Nylon monomers are di-amines and di-carboxylic acids:

14 Manufacture of ethanol
By the reaction of steam and ethene: Conditions: High temp (300 degrees C) Catalyst = phosphoric acid 60 atm

15 Advantages and disadvantages
Fast and efficient Continuous Product is relatively pure Some countries may have local oil supply But – crude oil is non-renewable

16 Manufacture of ethanol
By the fermentation of sugars: Glucose  ethanol + carbon dioxide Conditions: ENZYME Slightly above room temperature The carbon dioxide is allowed to escape and air prevented from getting in, to stop the oxidisation of the alcohol.

17 Advantages and disadvantages
Cheap Renewable resource (sugar cane) Cheap labour in the countries where sugar cane is grown But – Reaction is slow Inefficient batch process Poor quality product Alcohol must be distilled from the fermentation mixture (costly)

18 Dehydration of ethanol to ethene
Done by passing alcohol vapour over an aluminium oxide catalyst Ethanol  ethene + water Catalyst = aluminium oxide


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