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NOTES: A'2 Separation by Distillation

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Petroleum Refining ... many compounds, so the techniques must be applied in a large-scale oil refinery. ... A Look At Petroleum's Molecules ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NOTES: A'2 Separation by Distillation


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NOTES A.2 Separation by Distillation
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  • Substances can often be separated by taking
    advantage of their different physical properties
    remember the Foul Water Lab?

3
Different liquids may be separated by
  • gt DENSITY less dense
  • liquids will float on
  • top (oil on top of water)
  • this only works if the 2
  • substances are insoluble in
  • each other
  • gt BOILING POINT

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  • the boiling point of a liquid is the
    temperature at which the liquid boils or
    VAPORIZES (becomes a gas)

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  • ? the separation of
  • liquid substances
  • according to their
  • differing boiling
  • points is called
  • DISTILLATION.

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? DISTILLATION
  • ? a liquid mixture is heated
  • ? the substance with the LOWER boiling point will
    vaporize first and leave the distillation flask
  • ? it is then passed through a condenser where it
    is converted back to a liquid
  • ? eventually, the second substance begins to boil
  • ? each condensed liquid is called a DISTILLATE
    and can be collected separately

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Distillation Example
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  • If were given a mixture containing the 4 liquids
    shown in the table above, in what order would you
    collect them using a distillation apparatus?
  • , , ,

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  • If were given a mixture containing the 4 liquids
    shown in the table above, in what order would you
    collect them using a distillation apparatus?
  • acetone, cyclohexane, 2-propanol, water

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NOTES A.3 Petroleum Refining
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  • the techniques of distillation are used in the
    refining of petroleum, however, crude oil is a
    complex mixture of many compounds, so the
    techniques must be applied in a large-scale oil
    refinery.

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  • ? instead of separating crude oil into pure
    substances (single distillates), the refining
    process produces several mixtures, called
    FRACTIONS.
  • ? this process is known as FRACTIONAL
    DISTILLATION
  • ? the compounds in each fraction have a
    particular range of boiling points and specific
    uses

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Steps in Oil Refining
  • 1) the crude oil is heated to about 400C in a
    furnace then pumped into a distilling column
    (fractionating toweroften more then 100 ft
    tall!)

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Steps in Oil Refining
  • 2) the component substances of the crude oil
    vaporize as they rise up the column, they
    recondense into liquids as they cool

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Steps in Oil Refining
  • 3) trays are arranged at appropriate heights to
    collect the various fractions
  • -the smaller, lighter molecules have lower
    boiling points and condense high in the column
  • -the larger, heavier molecules condense lower in
    the column (at higher temps.)

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NOTES A.4 A Look At Petroleums Molecules
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  • in the refining process, some fractions never
    condense to the liquid state they remain gases!

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Gaseous Fraction
  • ? the gaseous fraction includes
  • ? compounds with LOW boiling points (less than
    40C)
  • ? small hydrocarbons (1 - 4 C atoms)
  • why do they have such low boiling points?

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INTERMOLECULAR FORCES
  • ? INTERMOLECULAR FORCES forces of attraction
    between molecules
  • ? as a result of weak intermolecular forces (they
    are only slightly attracted to each other), these
    small hydrocarbon molecules readily separate from
    each other and rise through the distillation
    column as gases

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Liquid Fractions
  • ? the liquid fractions of petroleum (i.e.
    gasoline, kerosene, and heavier oils) include
  • compounds with intermediate boiling
  • points
  • ? medium hydrocarbons (5 - 20 C atoms)

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Solid Fraction (Residue)
  • ? the thick, sticky
  • residue fraction
  • (never vaporizes
  • stays at the bottom) includes
  • ? the largest hydrocarbons with the strongest
    intermolecular forces (why they never vaporize!)
  • ? these compounds are solid at room temp.

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