Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GCSE Chemistry B - OCR - C1
- Fossil Fuels
- Examples of fossil fuels: crude oil,
coal and natural gas.
- Formed over millions
of years.
- Finite and non-renewable because they are used
up much faster than new supplies can be formed.
- Can be used as a source of fuel or chemicals.
- Scientists are now looking for alternatives for
crude oil due to it running out quickly.
- Crude OIl
- Transported to refineries through pipelines and oil
tankers.
- Oil often spills from the tanker and floats on the sea's
surface - this is known as slick and it can harm wildlife and
damage beaches.
- Detergents are used in order
to break up oil slicks.
- The oil affects alot of wildlife. The chemicals
are toxic and can harm and kill wildlife.
- Found in the Earth's
crust - pumped to the surface.
- Is a mixture of hydrocarbons and
is formed from dead marine
organisms
- Fractional distillation
- The process of separating crude oil into useful fractions
(parts) that contain mixtures of hydrocarbons with
similar boiling points, is called fractional distillation.
- Crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons -
a molecule that contains only hydrogen
and carbon atoms.
- Crude oil is heated in a fractionating column.
- This column has a temperature gradient.
- This means that, fractions with low boiling points leave at the top of the fractionating
column and fractions with high boiling points leave at the bottom of the
fractionating column.
- The order of the
fractions (from the
fractionating
column) from the
top to bottom are:
liquefied
petroleum gas
(LPG), petrol
(gasoline), paraffin
(aircraft fuel),
diesel, lubricating
oil, fuel oil,
bitumen (tar)
- Cracking
- Hydrogen molecules can be described as alkanes and alkenes.
Large alkane molecules can be broken down into smaller, more
useful, alkane and alkene molecules - this is the industrial
process called cracking.
- Needs ta catalyst, a high temperature and high pressure.
- Used to make more
petrol from naptha. It can
also be used to make
alkene molecules that
may be used to make
polymers.
- Forces between molecules
- A hydrocarbon molecule has: strong covalent bonds between
the atoms in the molecue and weak intermolecular forces
(this is forces of attraction between molecules).
- Longer hydrocarbons have stronger intermolecular
forces than the forces between shorter hydrocarbons.
- When a liquid hydrocarbon is boiled, its molecules move
faster and faster until all the intermolecular forces are
broken and it becomes a gas.
- Small molecules
have very weak
forces of attraction
between them and
are easily overcome
by heating.
- It is their boiling points which allow us to seperate a mixture of
hydrocarbons (eg. crude oil) by the process of distillation.
- Combustion
- Incomplete combustion
- Complete Combustion
- Of a hydrocarbon (fuel)
- When fuels react with
oxygen (in air), they burn
snd release useful heat
energy.
- Clean Air
- Making polymers
- Designer Polymers
- Cooking and Food Additives