Edexcel Chemistry chapter 20

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IGCSE Chemistry FlashCards sobre Edexcel Chemistry chapter 20, criado por Anna Bowring em 01-01-2015.
Anna Bowring
FlashCards por Anna Bowring, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Anna Bowring
Criado por Anna Bowring mais de 9 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão Responda
What is crude oil? It is a mixture of hydrocarbons which have different simple properties depending on the size of the molecule.
How is crude oil separated into fractions? It is heated and passed into a fractionating column. Which fraction a certain hydrocarbon gets into depends on its boiling point. When it condenses into a liquid, it can be tapped off. The top of the fractionating column is cooler (40*) than the bottom (400*)
List the fractions in order, starting from the top to the bottom. Refinery gases, gasoline (petrol), kerosine, diesel oil (gas oil), Fuel oil, bitumen.
What are refinery gases and what are the uses of refinery gases? It's a mixture of methane, ethane, propane and butane, which can be separated into individual gases if needed. Are commonly used as LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) for domestic heating and cooking.
What is gasoline and what are its uses? Gasoline is petrol with hydrocarbons that have similar boiling points. It is used as petrol.
What is Kerosine and what are its uses? It is used as fuel for jet aircraft, as domestic heating oil and as 'paraffin' for small heaters and lamps.
What is Diesel oil and what are its uses? It's a gas oil and it's used for buses, lorries, some cars, and railways engines which haven't been electrified. Some is also cracked to make other organic chemicals and produce more petrol.
What are fuel oils' uses? It's used for ships' boilers and for industrial heating.
What is Bitumen and what are its uses? It's a thick, black material, and it's melted and mixed with rock chippings to make the top surfaces of roads.
What does cracking mean and why is it important? Cracking - a useful process in which large hydrocarbon molecules are broken into smaller ones. It's important because it can make more amounts of a fraction that is needed, and it also converts hydrocarbons in crude oil into something more reactive, so therefore it's more useful.
What are the conditions for catalytic cracking? - With a catalyst, it must be at 600-700*C - Without a catalyst it must be higher - The catalyst is a mixture of silicon dioxide and aluminium oxide - The gas oil fraction is heated to give a gas, then passed over a catalyst.

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