Title: Fractional Distillation
1Fractional Distillation
2Crude oil
- I will be using crude oil as a recurring example
during my PowerPoint (it represent the mixture). - It is an exceptionally valuable resource that is
made up mostly of alkanes. - Crude oil is not renewable as it takes years to
form, this makes it ever more precious. - It is very impure, but oil is more efficient when
it is pure. - As there is a limited amount of oil, we need to
minimise the amount of waste. A mechanism used to
minimise waste is fractional distillation. The
process will be repeated to furthermore to
decrease the amount of waste.
3Fractional distillation
- Fractional distillation is the breaking down of a
mixture into its component parts. - This is done by boiling the mixture and
separating the products by their varying boiling
points.
4Method summary
- The mixture is separated by boiling and
collecting each substance as it boils. - Each substance is called a fraction, this is a
mixture of hydrocarbons of similar chain length.
As they are of similar chain length they have
similar properties and therefore boil at a
similar time.
5Method stages
- The crude oil is heated in a furnace.
- A mixture of both liquid and vapour rise, and
pass into a tower that is cooler at the top than
the bottom. - The vapours pass up this tower in which there are
trays stacked at different levels, the trays
contain bubble caps to trap the vapour. - As the vapour rises it gets cooler, once
sufficiently cool the vapour will condense into
liquid and will therefore be collected in the
tray below. - The shorter chained hydrocarbons condense in the
trays nearer to the top of the tower and vice
versa. This occurs as they have lower boiling
points, and are therefore liquids in lower
temperatures.
6Products
Name Approx boiling temperature (C) Uses
Petrol 40 Vehicle Fuel
Naptha 180 Industrial cleaners and solvents, petrol industry
Kerosene (paraffin) 200 Used as a gas for some heaters
Diesel Oil 250 Vehicles e.g. lorries (produces less CO2 than petrol)
Lubricating Oil 280 Reduce friction between multiple parts
Fuel Oil 310 The fuel used in ships and power stations
Greases and Wax 340 Used to make things like candles
Bitumen 367 Used for road tar and roofing
7Method flaws
- Small collections/pockets of certain length
hydrocarbons may get trapped in trays that dont
corresponded with there boiling point. - Also some substances have overlapping boiling
points (as shown in the table) and will therefore
remain mixed. - Pollutants are created, some pollutants may
induce taxes or disposal expenses. - There are lots of products that are less valuable
that are produced.
Product Gases Petrol Naptha Kersosene Gas oil Fuel oil and wax
Approximate boiling point/ K 310 310-450 400-490 430-523 590-620 Above 620
Chain length 1-5 5-10 8-12 11-16 16-24 25
Percentage Present 2 8 10 14 21 45
8Industrial cracking
- Individual fractions all have different values,
the general trend is that the longer the
fractions are the less valuable they are. The
naphtha fraction from the fractional distillation
of crude oil is in huge demand, this makes it
valuable as buyers will be competing for it. This
fraction is desired for petrol and by the
chemical industry. - Industrial cracking is used to crack larger
chains into more valuable shorter chains. - An additional benefit of cracking is that some
alkenes are produced, alkenes are more reactive
than alkanes and therefore have some desirable
uses. - There are two sub-categories of industrial
cracking. Thermal cracking and Catalytic cracking
9Thermal cracking
- This involves heating alkanes to a high
temperature (700-1200K),and putting them under
high pressure, up to 7000kPa. - Such high amounts of energy are required to break
carbon-carbon bonds. These bonds break in a way
that one electron from the pair in the covalent
bond goes to the end carbon atom in each chain,
one of chains pulls hydrogen off of the other,
consequently one of the chains needs to be double
bonded to fulfil the necessary amount of bonds,
this is how the alkenes are formed.
Thermal Cracking
Free radicals- electrons dot
10Catalytic cracking
- Catalytic cracking is very similar to thermal
cracking, but less energy is used (lower
temperature and pressure), temperature approx.
720K. - As there is less energy used a catalyst is
required to make the reaction successful. The
catalyst used is a Zeolite catalyst. Zeolites
have a honeycomb structure with an enormous
surface area, because of these properties it will
have particularly regular collisions. - The products of catalytic converting are mostly
branched alkanes, such as cyclokanes and aromatic
compounds.
11Bibliography
- Fractional distillation diagram-http//www.pustaka
laya.org/wiki/images/99/9903.png - Thermal cracking diagram- Andrew Inghams
PowerPoint