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πŸ§ͺ Crude Oil, Hydrocarbons and Alkanes

Spec 5.7.1.1 πŸ“— Foundation
πŸ“– In-Depth Theory

Crude Oil and Carbon Compounds

CRUDE OIL is a FINITE, NON-RENEWABLE resource found underground, formed over millions of years from the remains of ancient marine organisms under high pressure and temperature.
Crude oil is a MIXTURE of many different HYDROCARBONS β€” compounds containing only CARBON and HYDROGEN atoms.
Crude oil is both a FUEL and a FEEDSTOCK:
FUEL β€” burned to release energy (petrol, diesel, jet fuel, heating oil).
FEEDSTOCK β€” raw material for making other chemicals (plastics, medicines, dyes, detergents).
Because it is a MIXTURE, the hydrocarbons in crude oil are not chemically bonded β€” they can be separated by physical methods. The most important method is FRACTIONAL DISTILLATION.

Alkanes β€” Structure and Formulae

ALKANES are the most common type of hydrocarbon in crude oil.
Properties of alkanes:
Contain only SINGLE C-C bonds and C-H bonds β€” SATURATED hydrocarbons.
General formula: Cβ‚™Hβ‚‚β‚™β‚Šβ‚‚ (where n = number of carbon atoms).
Do not decolourise bromine water β€” no double bonds to react.
Homologous series β€” alkanes with increasing chain length:
Methane: CHβ‚„ (n=1, 1 carbon)
Ethane: Cβ‚‚H₆ (n=2)
Propane: C₃Hβ‚ˆ (n=3)
Butane: Cβ‚„H₁₀ (n=4)
Pentane: Cβ‚…H₁₂ (n=5)
STRUCTURAL FORMULAE:
Methane: H-C-H (tetrahedral, 4 H around 1 C)
Ethane: H₃C-CH₃ (two CH₃ groups joined)
Propane: H₃C-CHβ‚‚-CH₃
The C-H and C-C bonds in alkanes are all SINGLE COVALENT bonds β€” this makes alkanes relatively unreactive (the bonds are strong and non-polar).

Combustion of Alkanes

The main reaction of alkanes is COMBUSTION β€” burning in oxygen to release energy.
COMPLETE COMBUSTION (plenty of oxygen):
Alkane + oxygen β†’ carbon dioxide + water
CHβ‚„ + 2Oβ‚‚ β†’ COβ‚‚ + 2Hβ‚‚O (methane)
C₃Hβ‚ˆ + 5Oβ‚‚ β†’ 3COβ‚‚ + 4Hβ‚‚O (propane)
Products: COβ‚‚ and Hβ‚‚O only β€” relatively clean burn.
INCOMPLETE COMBUSTION (limited oxygen):
Carbon monoxide (CO) and soot (C β€” unburned carbon particles) are produced.
CO is TOXIC β€” colourless, odourless, binds to haemoglobin in red blood cells β†’ prevents oxygen transport.
Soot (particulates) causes respiratory problems and contributes to global dimming.
Why complete combustion is preferred:
More energy released per gram of fuel.
No toxic CO produced.
Less air pollution.
⚠️ Common Mistake

Alkanes are SATURATED β€” they have only SINGLE bonds and do NOT decolourise bromine water. ALKENES are UNSATURATED (have a C=C double bond) and DO decolourise bromine water. The bromine water test distinguishes saturated (no change) from unsaturated (decolourises).

πŸ“ Key Equations
General formula for alkanes: Cβ‚™Hβ‚‚β‚™β‚Šβ‚‚
CHβ‚„ + 2Oβ‚‚ β†’ COβ‚‚ + 2Hβ‚‚O (complete combustion of methane)
C₃Hβ‚ˆ + 5Oβ‚‚ β†’ 3COβ‚‚ + 4Hβ‚‚O (complete combustion of propane)
πŸ“Œ Key Note

Crude oil: mixture of hydrocarbons (C and H only). Alkanes: Cβ‚™Hβ‚‚β‚™β‚Šβ‚‚, saturated (single bonds only), relatively unreactive. Complete combustion: COβ‚‚ + Hβ‚‚O. Incomplete combustion: CO (toxic) + soot. Crude oil is both fuel and feedstock.

🎯 Matching Activity β€” Match the Alkane

Match each alkane to its molecular formula. β€” drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Methane
Drop here
Ethane
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Propane
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Butane
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Complete combustion
Drop here
CHβ‚„ β€” 1 carbon, 4 hydrogens
Cβ‚„H₁₀ β€” 4 carbons, 10 hydrogens
Cβ‚‚H₆ β€” 2 carbons, 6 hydrogens
C₃Hβ‚ˆ β€” 3 carbons, 8 hydrogens
Alkane + Oβ‚‚ β†’ COβ‚‚ + Hβ‚‚O β€” clean burn with plenty of oxygen
🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. An alkane has 5 carbon atoms. What is its molecular formula?
2. Why is incomplete combustion of fuels more dangerous than complete combustion?
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