Created by Iona Diack
about 9 years ago
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Question | Answer |
What do all vegetable oil molecules contain? | Chains of Carbon atoms with Hydrogen attached to them. |
What are the molecules like in some vegetable oils and how are they bonded? | They are only carbon and they're joined together by double bonds. |
What are these called? | Unsaturated oils. |
How do we detect unsaturated oils? | Reacting them with Bromine or Iodine which then decolourises. |
What form are vegetable oils in at room temperature? | Liquids. |
How can the melting point of these oils be increased? | By reacting them with Hydrogen in the presence of a Nickel catalyst at 60 Degrees. |
What does this reaction do? | It replaces some or all of the carbon to carbon double bonds with single bonds. |
What is the result of this reaction? | The melting point is higher and the oil becomes a solid at room temperature. |
What is this process called? | Hardening |
What are oils that have undergone this process are sometimes called... | Hydrogenated Oils |
Why do Hydrogenated oils have a higher melting point? | because as the straighter chains attract each other more they are solids at room temperature. |
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