Full Chem Notes
Full Chem Notes
= 68.2 mol of C
3
H
8
2. Write a balanced equation for the
chemical reaction.
C
3
H
8
+ 5O
2
3CO
2
+ 4H
2
O
C
3
H
8
+ 5O
2
3CO
2
+ 4H
2
O
3. Use the ratio given by the balancing
numbers in the equation to find the
number of moles of O
2
required to
react with the C
3
H
8
.
1 mol of C
3
H
8
: 5 moles O
2
68.2 x 5 = 341
so 68.2 mol C
3
H
8
: 341 mol O
2
4. Convert the moles of oxygen back
into a mass.
mass = moles x M
r
= 341 x 32 = 10,900g
Mass of O
2
= 10.9 kg (3 s.f.)
Gas Volumes
At room temperature and pressure one mole of a gas has the same volume 24dm
3.
Moles of gas =
24
) (dm gas of volume
3
or
24000
) (cm gas of volume
3
Solution Calculations
A concentration of 1mol/dm
3
means that 1 mol of the substance is dissolved in each dm
3
of water.
Concentration (mol / g dm
-3
) =
) (dm volume
s(g) (mol)/gram amount
3
Chemical Formulae and Chemical Equations
The formula of a compound tells us the number of each type of atom in a molecule. The formula of sulphuric
acid is H
2
SO
4
. This tells us that there are two moles of hydrogen, one mole of sulphur and four moles of oxygen.
For ionic compounds, the formula can be worked out by making sure the total charge equals zero. The valency
10
can also be used. The valency represents the total numbers of covalent bonds an atom can form, or the charge
on an ion. Valencies can be worked out by using the periodic table:
Group I II III IV V VI VII O
Valency 1 2 3 4 3 2 1 0
The valencies of some elements in some compounds are given in the name in roman numerals, in brackets. For
example: Iron (III) Chloride. The valencies of some compounds and elements must be learned:
Name Formula Valency
Hydrogen H
2
+
1
Zinc Zn 2
Nitrate NO
3
1
Hydroxide OH 1
Carbonate CO
3
2
Sulphate SO
4
2
Ammonium (forms positive ion) NH
4
1
Diatomic elements are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and the halogens.
Empirical Formulae
The empirical formula of a compound is the simplest whole number ratio of atoms in a compound.
e.g. 2.88g of magnesium is heated in nitrogen, and forms 4.00g of magnesium nitride. Find the
empirical formula of magnesium nitride.
Mass of nitrogen = 4.00 - 2.88 = 1.12g
Write the mass, or percentage by
mass, of each element.
Mg
2.88g
N
1.12g
Divide each mass (or percentage) by
the relative atomic mass of the
element, to convert to moles.
24
88 . 2
=0.120mol
14
12 . 1
=0.0800mol
Simplify this mole ratio by dividing
each number by the smallest.
50 . 1
0800 . 0
120 . 0
00 . 1
0800 . 0
0800 . 0
If this does not give whole number,
multiply each by an appropriate figure
in this case, the values are doubled.
1.50 x 2 = 3.00 1.00 x 2 = 2.00
Having arrived at a whole-number ratio, state the ratio as a formula:
Empirical formula = Mg
3
N
2
11
Molecular Formula
This is the actual number of each type of atom in one molecule of a molecular substance. This must be a whole
number multiple of the empirical formula, which means the relative molecular mass must be a whole number
multiple of the empirical formula mass.
A compound has the empirical formula CH
2
O, and a relative molecular mass of 120. What is its molecular
formula?
Relative mass of CH
2
O = 12 + 2 x 1 + 16 = 30
120 / 30 = 4, so there must be 4 lots of CH
2
O in the molecule to give the mass of 120
Therefore molecular formula must be C
4
H
8
O
4
Percentage Yield
Percentage yield = actual yield/theoretical maximum yield x 100%
The percentage yield may not be 100% for several reasons. The reaction may not be complete, there may be
other side reactions occurring, or the product cannot be fully separated.
Ionic Compounds
There are three different types of bonding which hold together the atoms in substances which are ionic,
covalent and metallic. These occur because of the redistributing of electrons. Ionic bonding occurs in
compounds of a metal with a non-metal, as well as ammonium compounds. When dissolved in water, acids also
form ions. The atoms become stable from a full outer shell of electrons. The gaining/losing of electrons cause
these to become ions.
e.g. calcium chloride
CaCl
2
1.
Calcium atoms have 2 electrons in their outer
shell.
Chlorine atoms have 7 electrons in their outer
shells.
2.
Electrons are transferred from the metal,
calcium, to the non-metal, chlorine.
12
3. Draw the final result, placing the ions in square brackets, and remembering to show the charge on each
ion. Each ion must have a full outer shell of electrons:
Calcium has lost 2 electrons, so has become a
2+ ion. The chlorine atoms have gained one
electron each, and have a charge of 1-. These
are now attracted to each other, and held
together by strong electrostatic attractions
between ions with opposite charges.
Metals ions always form positive ions. Non-metals form negative ions - except for hydrogen (H
+
) and ammonium
(NH4
+
) ions. The ions are generally arranged in an ionic lattice a giant structure, placing positive ions next to
negative, to maximise the total attraction, such as in the sodium chloride lattice:
They have high melting and boiling points, because of their giant structure, with strong electrostatic attractions
between positive and negative ions throughout the entire structure. They are also brittle. When being bent the
similarly charged ions touch and repel, shattering the object. The size of the charge on an ion is equal to its
valency. Magnesium is in Group II, so has 2 outer electrons; it will therefore lose these when it reacts, and forms
a Mg
2+
ion. Oxygen is in Group VI, and has 6 outer electrons; it therefore needs to gain 2 electrons to fill the
shell, and will form an O
2-
ion. The size of the charge on the ions affects the properties of the ionic compound.
For example, the melting point of magnesium oxide, MgO, is much higher than that of sodium chloride, NaCl.
MgO consists of ions with two units of charge Mg
2+
and O
2-
- which therefore attract each other much more
strongly than the singly charged Na
+
and Cl
-
ions in NaCl, so much more heat energy is required to separate
them.
Covalent Bonding
A covalent bond is a shared pair of electrons. The outer shells overlap as the atoms share pairs of electrons, so
that both atoms can achieve a full outer shell. The bond holds the atoms together, because the positively
charged protons in the nuclei of the two atoms are both electrostatically attracted to the negatively charged
electron pair in the bond.
Covalent bonding can also be represented by a dot-and-cross diagram
e.g. oxygen
Draw correct number of electrons on outer shell:
Na
+
ion
Cl
-
ion
13
Oxygen is in group VI, so there are six
electrons in the outer shell of each atom.
Draw a diagram of the molecule representing each bond as a
line between the atoms. One line represents one covalent
bond (a pair of electrons). In the dot-and-cross diagram, this is
represented as one dot and one cross:
Hydrogen
H H
Chlorine
Cl Cl
Nitrogen
N N
Hydrogen
chloride
H Cl
Carbon dioxide
O C O
Ammonia
N H
H
H
14
Water
H O H
Ethene
C C
H
H
H
H
Methane
C
H
H H
H
Ethane
C H C
H
H
H
H
H
Most covalently bonded compounds have a simple molecular structure, meaning they have low melting and
boiling points due to the weak intermolecular forces which are easily broken. The covalent bonds are not broken
when it melts or boils.
Some form giant structures, in which each atom is covalently bonded to several others, with this pattern
repeating indefinitely to form a single, giant macromolecule, of unlimited size. This type of substance is best
illustrated using two allotropes of carbon. Allotropes are different structural forms of the same element.
Diamond Graphite
15
Giant lattice, with each carbon atom forming four
strong covalent bonds to four other carbon atoms.
Layer lattice, with each carbon atom forming three
covalent bonds to three other carbon atoms, giving
hexagonal layers of atoms.
High sublimation temperature strong covalent
bonds need to be broken, hence more energy is
required. The result is single carbon atoms with no
bonds, between them, meaning it is sublimated.
High sublimation temperature strong covalent
bonds need to be broken, hence more energy is
required. The result is single carbon atoms with no
bonds, between them, meaning it is sublimated.
Uses: coating saw blades and drill bits its extreme
hardness allows it to cut through any substance.
Uses: in lubricating oils, and as pencil lead the
weak layers allow it to slide and be transferred to
items such as paper.
Ionic compounds have higher melting points than covalent compounds as the ions are held together in a giant
structure by strong electrostatic forces. Covalent compounds have a simple molecular structure although the
covalent bonds holding the hydrogen and oxygen atoms together are very strong, these are not broken on
melting, only the weak intermolecular forces are broken.
Metallic Bonding
This is found in metals and alloys. Each metal atom loses its outer shell electrons, becoming a positive ion. These
positive metal ions are closely-packed in a lattice. The outer shell electrons are delocalised and they are free to
move throughout the entire metal. It is the electrostatic attraction between the positive metal ions in the
lattice, and the cloud of delocalised negative electrons which holds the metal together.
16
Property Explanation
High melting and boiling point,
high tensile strength
Ionic compounds have a giant structure, with strong electrostatic attraction
between positive metal ions and delocalised electrons, requiring large
amounts of energy to overcome it.
Malleable
The layers of metal ions can slide easily over each other. This can happen
without disrupting the metallic bonding.
Electrical conductors There is a sea of delocalised electrons, free to carry the current.
Regular lattice of positive metal ions.
Delocalised cloud of electrons, free to
move between the ions.
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
e
-
17
Type Of
Substance
Formed
From
Structure Bonding Description Properties Examples
Metallic Metals Giant Metallic
Lattice of positive metal ions held in a
cloud of delocalised electrons.
High melting and
boiling points;
electrical conductors
Gold, copper,
steel, silver
Ionic
Metals and
non-metals.
Giant Ionic
Lattice of alternatingly charged ions,
held by electrostatic force.
High melting and
boiling points
Sodium chloride,
magnesium oxide
all salts.
Covalent
Molecular
Non-metals Simple Covalent
Help together by a shared pair of
electrons, with weak intermolecular
bonds.
Low melting and
boiling points
Water, ammonia,
diatomic
elements.
Giant Covalent Non-metals Giant Covalent
Giant three-dimensional tetrahedral
structure with no free electrons..
Sublimes at very high
temperatures; hard:
electrical insulator
Diamond
Layered hexagonal structure with
some free electrons.
Sublimes at very high
temperatures; soft;
electrical conductor
Graphite
18
Electrolysis
Conductivity
There are two types of electric conductors: metallic conductors and electrolytes. In metallic
conductors, the electrons are delocalised, and carry the charge. These are solid metals, liquid metals,
and graphite. Electrolytes conduct electricity because of free moving ions. If an ionic substance melts
or is dissolved, it is an electrolyte. Covalently bonded acids which are dissolved in water are also
electrolytes, due to the disassociated ions. Electrolytes have a higher resistance than metallic
conductors, and electrolytes are decomposed by the passage of an electric current. This
decomposition is called electrolysis.
Ions
There are two ions present in the electrolyte, anions (positive) and cations (negative.) The anion is
attracted to the anode (negative electrode) and the cation is attracted to the cathode (positive
electrode). There are three main rules used to find the charge of an ion: metal ions, hydrogen ions,
and ammonium ions are ALWAYS positive. Non-metal ions are always negative. The size of the
charge is equal to the valency of the element.
Products of Electrolysis
The simplest examples of electrolysis involve a molten binary ionic substance. When this is
electrolysed, it breaks down into the two electrons from which it is made. The metal (cation) will
form at the cathode, and the non-metal (anion) will form at the anode.
If the compound is aqueous, the H
+
and OH
-
ions complicate things. These may be discharged as
hydrogen and oxygen. When there are two ions of the same type involved in electrolysis, their
reactivity is the main factor. The less reactive element will be discharged, as its compound is less
stable.
The results of electrolysing an ionic compound in aqueous solution can be predicted by using the
rules below:
Hydrogen will be discharged at the cathode unless copper, silver or gold ions are present in
which case they will be discharged.
Oxygen will be discharged at the anode unless chlorine, bromine or iodine are present (in
high concentrations), in which case they will be discharged as the halogen.
The electrodes are usually made from platinum or graphite, as they are unreactive.
Electrolysis and Redox
All electrolysis reactions are redox reactions. Oxidation is the loss of electrons, reduction is the gain
of electrons (OILRIG). Reduction will take place at the cathode, oxidation at the anode. The redox
reactions can be represented by two half equations, which show electrons being lost or gained,
represented with the symbol e
-
. When the two half equations are combined, the electrons must
cancel out, giving an ordinary equation for the whole reaction. Some examples:
Molten Zinc Chloride
As it is molten, the zinc chloride is split into molten zinc and chlorine gas. The positive Zn2+ ions are
attracted to the cathode, where they gain two electrons, and are reduced to zinc metal:
19
Cu
2+
(aq) + 2e
--
Cu(s)
Cu
2+
(aq) + 2e
--
Cu(s)
2molesofelectronsgives1moleofCu
molesofCu=molesofelectrons/2 =0.0373/2 =0.0187molCu
Mass=molesxmolarmass =0.0187x63.5 =1.19g
Massofcopper=1.19g
e.g. Forhowlongmustacurrentof0.1Abepassedthroughdilutesulphuricacidinorder
toproduce240cm
3
ofoxygengas?
Molesofgas=volume/24000 =240/24000 =0.010molO
2
4OH
--
(aq) 2H
2
O(l) + O
2
(g) + 4e
--
4OH
--
(aq) 2H
2
O(l) + O
2
(g) + 4e
--
4molesofelectronsgive1moleofO
2
Molesofelectrons=molesofO
2
x4 =0.010x4 =0.040mole
-
Charge=molesofe
-
x96500 =0.040x96500 =3860C
21
t=Q/I =3860/0.1 =38600s
time=643minutes(3s.f.)
The Chlor-Alkali Industry
The electrolysis of concentrated sodium chloride solution (brine) produces three important
chemicals, chlorine, hydrogen, and sodium hydroxide. The method of manufacture is called the
chlor-alkali industry. This is carried out in a diaphragm (membrane) cell:
The electrodes are in separate compartments, partitioned by a permeable diaphragm. At the anode
chlorine ions are oxidised, forming chlorine gas, collected from the top:
2Cl
--
(aq) Cl
2
(g) + 2e
--
2Cl
--
(aq) Cl
2
(g) + 2e
--
Atthecathode,hydrogenionsarereduced,toformhydrogengas,whichisalsocollectedat
thetopofthecell:
2H
+
(aq) + 2e
--
H
2
(g)
2H
+
(aq) + 2e
--
H
2
(g)
TheH
+
ionsareformedwhenthewaterdisassociates,andtheyareremovedbythe
electrolysis.DuetoLeChateliersprinciple,morewateristhendisassociated:
TheOH
-
ionsarenotinvolvedintheelectrolysis,andaccumulateinthecathode
compartment.TheNa+ionsareattractedtothecathode,butarenotremovedby
electrolysis,sotheyremaininsolution.Thesolutioninthecathodecompartmentisnow
enrichedinsodiumandhydroxideions,akasodiumhydroxidesolution.
Thediaphragmstopsthehydroxideionsfromdiffusingbackintotheanodecellwherethey
wouldreactwiththechlorine.,astheanodecellhasahigherlevelofsolution,meaningthe
concentrated
saltsolutionin
sodium
hydroxideand
dilutesalt
nickelcathode
titaniumanode
hydrogen chlorin
e
diaphrag
m
H
2
O(l) H
+
(aq) + OH
--
(aq) .
H
2
O(l) H
+
(aq) + OH
--
(aq) .
22
flowisfromanodecathode.Somesodiumchlorideremainsinthesolution,sothesolution
isheatedtillthesodiumchloridecrystallisesout,soitcanberemoved.
Sodiumhydroxideisused:
Topurifybauxitetomakealumina,soaluminiumcanbeextracted.
Tomakesoap
Tobreakdownwoodwhenmakingpaper
Tomanufacturechemicals
Chlorineisusedtomakebleach,hydrochloricacid,PVC,andtosterilisewater.
Hydrogenisusedtomanufactureammoniaandmargarine,andasanalternativepower
source.
23
Section 2: Chemistry of the Elements
The Periodic Table
The elements in the Periodic Table are arranged in order of increasing atomic number. The number
of shells is given by the Period of an element. The number of electrons in the outer shell is given by
the Group. The elements in Group 0 all have full outer shells. The elements can be classified as
either metals or non-metals largely on the basis of their electrical conductivity. Metals conduct
electricity well, whereas non-metals (except graphite) are insulators.
The vast majority of elements are metals. The metals are found to the left of the Periodic Table, and
the non-metals towards the right. Some elements close to the line, example: silicon, display
properties between those of metals and non-metals, are classed as semi-metals. The metals tend to
form positive ions, as they lose their outer shell electrons. The non-metals generally gain electrons,
and form negative ions, or bond covalently with other non-metals.
A further distinction between the metals and non-metals is in the chemical behaviour of their
oxides. Metal oxides are basic they will react with acids to form salts, and some of them dissolve in
water to give alkaline solutions:
Non-metal oxides are acidic they react with alkalis to form salts, and dissolve in water to give acidic
solution. Important examples are carbon dioxide, which is dissolved under pressure in fizzy drinks,
and sulphur dioxide, which dissolves in rainwater to make sulphuric acid, causing acid rain.
24
25
Group I (The Alkali Metals)
Properties
They have a low density and lithium, potassium and sodium float. They are shiny when freshly cut,
but rapidly tarnish. They are soft and have low melting points. They are silvery except for Caesium
which is pale gold, and they are very reactive and are stored under oil or in argon.
Trends
On descending the group, the alkali metals become more reactive, softer, and denser. The outer
electrons become further from the nucleus, meaning the attraction becomes weaker, making it
easier to remove the outer electrons, making it more reactive.
Reactions
With oxygen, to form oxides:
4Na(s)+O
2
(g) 2Na
2
O(s)
4Na(s)+O
2
(g) 2Na
2
O(s)
With water, to form hydroxides (hence the name, the alkali metals) and hydrogen:
2K(s)+2H
2
O(l) 2KOH(aq)+H
2
(g)
2K(s)+2H
2
O(l) 2KOH(aq)+H
2
(g)
Lithium reacts vigorously, fizzing around on the surface of the water, and appearing to dissolve, as it
forms soluble lithium hydroxide.
Sodium reactions are the same as Lithium, but slightly more reactive, and forms soluble sodium
hydroxide. With more heat produced, and sodiums lower melting point, the sodium becomes
molten, and forms a ball of liquid metal.
Potassium reacts violently, fizzing around very rapidly in a molten ball, and appearing to dissolve as
it forms soluble potassium hydroxide. It also burns with a purple flame.
Group VII (The Halogens)
These are reactive diatomic non-metals, which give off poisonous fumes.
Fluorine, F
2
Pale yellow gas, very toxic and extremely reactive.
Chlorine, Cl
2
Pale green gas, dense and toxic.
Bromine, Br
2
Dense, dark red liquid, gives off red-brown vapour. Toxic and corrosive.
Iodine, I
2
Dark grey solid, sublimes to give a purple vapour. Forms a brown solution in
water, and a purple solution in hexane.
26
Trends
On descending the group, they become darker, and have a higher melting/boiling point. They
become less reactive as the distance of the outer shell from the nucleus increases, making it harder
to attract a new electron.
Reactions
The halogens burn vigorously when heated with the alkali metals, to form white crystalline halide
salts. These are ionic compounds.
2Na(s)+Cl
2
(g) 2NaCl(s)
2Na(s)+Cl
2
(g) 2NaCl(s)
Any halogen can be displaced from its compound (halide) by using a more reactive halogen. Such
reactions are done in aqueous solution.
1. Chlorine + sodium bromide
Word equation: Chlorine + sodium bromide sodium chloride + bromine
Formula equation:
Cl
2
(aq)+2NaBr(aq) 2NaCl(aq)+Br
2
(aq)
Cl
2
(aq)+2NaBr(aq) 2NaCl(aq)+Br
2
(aq)
The colourless chlorine water reacts with the colourless sodium bromide solution, producing a
solution which is orange due to the formation of aqueous bromine.
2. Chlorine + sodium iodide
Word equation: Chlorine + sodium iodide sodium chloride + iodine
Formula equation:
Cl
2
(aq)+2NaI(aq) 2NaCl(aq)+I
2
(aq)
Cl
2
(aq)+2NaI(aq) 2NaCl(aq)+I
2
(aq)
The colourless chlorine water reacts with the colourless sodium iodide solution, producing a solution
which is brown due to the formation of aqueous iodine.
3. Bromine + sodium iodide
Word equation: Bromine + sodium iodide sodium bromide + iodine
Formula equation:
Br
2
(aq)+2NaI(aq) 2NaBr(aq)+I
2
(aq)
Br
2
(aq)+2NaI(aq) 2NaBr(aq)+I
2
(aq)
The orange bromine water reacts with the colourless sodium iodide solution, producing a solution
which is brown due to the formation of aqueous iodine.
Group 0 The Noble Gases
The gases of group 0 (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, radon) are all colourless gases, and are
extremely unreactive they do not form compounds with other elements and so are stable.
27
Oxygen And Oxides
Oxygen is the second-most abundant gases in the atmosphere:
GAS ABUNDANCE
Nitrogen 78%
Oxygen 21%
Argon 0.9%
Carbon dioxide 0.04%
Water vapour Variable
To find the percentage of oxygen in air, attach two gas syringes together with a glass tube, which
contain copper filings. Fill one gas syringe, empty the other, and heat the tube. The metal will be
oxidised, and the volume of air (at room temperature) is now 21% less.
Preparation Of Oxygen
Oxygen can be prepared by the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide. A manganese dioxide catalyst
is needed:
MnO
2
2H
2
O
2
(aq)
MnO
2
MnO
2
2H
2
O(l)+O
2
(g)
MnO
2
2H
2
O
2
(aq)
MnO
2
MnO
2
2H
2
O(l)+O
2
(g)
gas syringe
copper
turnings
glass tube
28
Formation Of Oxides
Magnesium burns vigorously in air, with a brilliant white flame, to form magnesium oxide, a white
powder. Magnesium oxide is a metal oxide, and so is basic. It is slightly soluble in water, giving a
slightly alkaline solution of magnesium hydroxide (pH 10). It will react with acids, to form a salt and
water:
2Mg(s)+O
2
(g) 2MgO(s)
2Mg(s)+O
2
(g) 2MgO(s)
MgO(s)+H
2
O(l) Mg(OH)
2
(aq)
MgO(s)+H
2
O(l) Mg(OH)
2
(aq)
MgO(s)+2HCl(aq) MgCl
2
(aq)+H
2
O(l)
MgO(s)+2HCl(aq) MgCl
2
(aq)+H
2
O(l)
Carbon burns steadily if heated in air, to form colourless carbon dioxide gas. If the supply of oxygen
is limited, some toxic carbon monoxide is also produced. Carbon dioxide is a non-metal oxide, and so
is acidic. It is slightly soluble in water, giving a weakly acidic solution of carbonic acid (pH 6).
C(s)+O
2
(g) CO
2
(g)
C(s)+O
2
(g) CO
2
(g)
CO
2
(g)+H
2
O(l) H
2
CO
3
(aq)
CO
2
(g)+H
2
O(l) H
2
CO
3
(aq)
Sulphur is a yellow solid, which burns in air with a bright blue flame, to form white fumes of sulphur
dioxide. It dissolves readily in water to form an acidic solution of sulphurous acid, H
2
SO
3
.
S(s)+O
2
(g) SO
2
(g)
S(s)+O
2
(g) SO
2
(g)
SO
2
(g)+H
2
O(l) H
2
SO
3
(aq)
SO
2
(g)+H
2
O(l) H
2
SO
3
(aq)
oxygen
gas
beehive
shelf
hydrogen
peroxide
manganese
dioxide
29
Carbon Dioxide
To prepare carbon dioxide add hydrochloric acid to marble chips (calcium carbonate).
CaCO
3
(s)+2HCl(aq) CaCl
2
(aq)+H
2
O(l)
CaCO
3
(s)+2HCl(aq) CaCl
2
(aq)+H
2
O(l)
Carbon dioxide is also formed in the thermal decomposition of metal carbonates. Green copper (II)
carbonate becomes black copper (I) oxide.
heat
CuCO
3
(s)
heat
heat
CuO(s)+CO
2
(g)
heat
CuCO
3
(s)
heat
heat
CuO(s)+CO
2
(g)
Carbon dioxide is used in fire extinguishers it is unreactive, and denser than air, so gathers around
the fire, depriving it of oxygen. It is especially useful for electrical fires, when it is dangerous to use
water. Carbon dioxide is also dissolved, under pressure, in fizzy drinks. When the bottle is opened,
the pressure is released, and the carbon dioxide bubbles out of solution.
Acid Rain
Sulphur dioxide is formed when coal is burned in power stations. This dissolves in rainwater, forming
acid rain. This damages trees, kills fish in rivers and lakes, and damages limestone buildings. Similar
pollutants include nitrogen oxides (NO, NO
2
), formed when nitrogen in the air reacts with oxygen in
hot car engines. It can dissolve in rain water to form nitrous and nitric acids, which also contribute to
acid rain.
Hydrogen and Water
Hydrogen is the least dense but most abundant element in the universe.
Test for Hydrogen
To test for the presence of hydrogen gas, a sample of the gas is collected in a test tube, and a lit
splint is applied. Hydrogen ignites with a squeaky pop and a blue flame will be seen.
Combustion of Hydrogen
When hydrogen burns it forms water (hydrogen oxide). Because the flame is hot, this will form as
water vapour.
2H
2
(g)+O
2
(g) H
2
O(g)
2H
2
(g)+O
2
(g) H
2
O(g)
Test for Water
White anhydrous copper (II) sulphate turns blue in the presence water and pure water boils at
exactly 100C.
30
Reactivity Series
A more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal from a compound, and this usually occurs in
solution, but can occur in solids, if the metal is heated.
Copper metal + magnesium chloride solution: no reaction copper is less reactive than magnesium.
Magnesium metal + copper sulphate solution: Magnesium is more reactive than copper, so can
displace it. A pink coating of copper forms on the surface of the magnesium, and the blue copper
sulphate solution slowly turns colourless, as it is converted to magnesium sulphate:
Mg(s)+CuSO
4
(aq) MgSO
4
(aq)+Cu(s)
Mg(s)+CuSO
4
(aq) MgSO
4
(aq)+Cu(s)
Displacement reactions can be used to establish a reactivity series for common metals:
METAL REACTION WITH ACID REACTION WITH WATER
Potassium
Dangerously violent
Violent - hydrogen produced is ignited
Sodium
Very vigorous shoots around on the
surface of the water
Lithium
Vigorous fizzes around on the surface
of the water
Calcium Fizzes vigorously, forming hydrogen gas Fizzes rapidly, forming hydrogen gas
Magnesium Fizzes rapidly, forming hydrogen gas Reacts very slowly, forming hydrogen gas
31
Zinc Fizzes steadily, forming hydrogen gas Reacts very slowly, forming hydrogen gas
Iron Fizzes very slowly, forming hydrogen gas
Rusts slowly, but only if oxygen is
present
Copper No reaction No reaction
Reduction and Oxidation
Any reaction which involves oxygen being transferred between two other elements is a redox
reaction. A redox reaction is one in which both oxidation and reduction occurs.
Oxidation is the gain of oxygen and the loss of electrons.
Reduction is the loss of oxygen and the gain of electrons.
A substance which provides oxygen and takes electrons is the oxidising agent.
A substance which removes oxygen and provides electrons is the reducing agent.
Rusting
Rusting is the oxidation of iron, to form hydrated iron(III) oxide.
Only iron (and alloys of iron, such as steel) can rust. Other metals corrode. Rusting requires oxygen
and water. Rusting can be prevented by placing grease or oil on the iron which repels water. This is
applied regularly and is messy, normally for machinery. Paint and plastic coatings form a protective
layer, but once scratched the metal below starts to rust. Galvanising involves coating the iron in a
layer of zinc. If scratched the zinc acts sacrificially
Sacrificial protection involves placing a more reactive metal (such as magnesium or zinc) in contact
with the iron object. Because this sacrificial metal is more reactive, it will corrode in preference to
the iron it is sacrificed to protect the iron from rusting. This is used mainly on ships. Blocks of zinc
are bolted to the hull at regular intervals. These slowly oxidise, and protect the ship from rusting.
They must be regularly replaced, when they become corroded.
Test for Ions
Cations:
Li
+
Flame test add conc. HCl to the
compound, dip wire loop in the
paste and hold in a Bunsen
burner blue flame.
Red colour
Na
+
Persistent orange colour
K
+
Lilac colour
Ca
2+
Brick red colour
NH
4+
Add sodium hydroxide and warm. Ammonia gas is produced which has a pungent smell and turns red litmus
blue.
Cu
2+
Add sodium hydroxide solution Pale blue precipitate of Cu(OH)
2
Fe
2+
Dirty green precipitate of Fe(OH)
2
Fe
3+
Rusty brown precipitate of Fe(OH)
3
32
Anions:
Cl
-
Add nitric acid and then silver (I) nitrate solution. White precipitate of silver chloride.
Br
-
Cream precipitate of silver iodide.
I
-
Yellow precipitate of silver bromide.
SO
4
2-
Add some hydrochloric acid and then barium chloride solution. White precipitate of Barium Sulphate.
CO
3
2-
Add hydrochloric acid and bubble gas through limewater. Carbon Dioxide gas is produced which
turns lime water cloudy.
Gases:
Ammonia NH
3
Damp red litmus paper Turns damp red litmus blue.
Carbon Dioxide CO
2
Bubble through limewater It turns cloudy.
Chlorine Cl
2
Expose to damp blue litmus The paper is bleached white.
Hydrogen H
2
Collect gas in a test tube and apply a lit splint Squeaky pop and blue flame.
Oxygen O
2
Collect gas in a test tube, apply a glowing splint Splint relights.
Water H
2
O Pass through anhydrous copper sulphate crystals, or
test with anhydrous cobalt chloride paper
Copper sulphate white to blue, cobalt
chloride paper blue to pink.
33
Section 3 Organic Chemistry
The Alkanes
The alkanes are a homologous series of hydrocarbons. This means they have the same general
formula, same chemical properties and follow a trend in physical properties. The general formula of
alkanes is C
n
H
2n+2
.
Naming Hydrocarbons
When naming an organic molecule, look for the longest continuous chain of carbon atoms, which
determines the root:
Number of carbon atoms Root
1 METH-
2 ETH-
3 PROP-
4 BUT-
5 PENT-
6 HEX-
7 HEPT-
8 OCT-
The root is also given a suffix to identify the series to which the compound belongs, and all alkanes
have names ending in ane.
Bromination
Alkanes will react with bromine if they exposed to ultraviolet light. This is a substitution reaction,
where one hydrogen atom is replaced with one bromine atom. Hydrogen Bromide is also produced:
CH
4
+Br
2
CH
3
Br+HBr
34
Isomerism
Isomers are molecules with the same molecular formula, but different structural formulae.
The formulae shown above are displayed formulae they show every bond and every atom. One
line connecting the atoms represents one covalent bond.
35
Combustion
Alkanes are not very reactive, and so they are mostly used as fuels. When a hydrocarbon is
completely burned, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
C
3
H
8
+5O
2
3CO
2
+4H
2
O
C
3
H
8
+5O
2
3CO
2
+4H
2
O
If insufficient oxygen is available, incomplete combustion occurs, and this produces the poisonous
carbon monoxide:
2C
3
H
8
+7O
2
6CO+8H
2
O
2C
3
H
8
+7O
2
6CO+8H
2
O
Ifthereisevenlessoxygen,carbonisproduced,leadingtoasooty,yellowflame.
Alkenes
The alkenes are another homologous series of hydrocarbons, with the general formula C
n
H
2n.
Addition Reactions
Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons, as they only contain single bonds. This means they are
unreactive, and are used as fuels. Alkenes are unsaturated, as they contain double bonds. They are
36
more reactive as the double bond can be broken, leading to an addition reaction. Bromination is an
addition reaction:
C
H
H
C
H
H
C
H
H
C
H
H
+
Br Br
Br Br
C
H
H
Br C
H
H
Br
C
H
H
Br C
H
H
Br
This can be used to distinguish between alkanes and alkenes. When bromine water is added to an
alkene it rapidly decolourises, but when added to an alkane the solution stays orange.
Ethanol
Ethanol is part of the alcohols homologous series:
C C H
H
OH H
H
H
There are two main methods for its production:
Fermentation:
This is the conversion of glucose to ethanol and carbon dioxide which is done by anaerobic
respiration of yeast. A valve must be used to allow the carbon dioxide to escape, without allowing air
to enter the vessel. This is done at 40 degrees, which is the optimum temperature for the zymase
enzyme. This produces alcohol of 15% concentration, and is the only method used to produce
alcoholic drinks, as the flavour of the fruit juices fermented provides the flavour of the drink. The
alcohol is then distilled to produce more concentrated drinks, such as vodka. This is a batch process,
and so takes much longer.
zy mase
C
6
H
12
O
6
(aq)
zy mase
zy mase
2C
2
H
5
OH(aq) + 2CO
2
(g)
zy mase
C
6
H
12
O
6
(aq)
zy mase
zy mase
2C
2
H
5
OH(aq) + 2CO
2
(g)
Salts are formed when the hydrogen in the acid is replaced by a different positive ion
usually a metal ion.
Neutralisation is the reaction of an acid with a base. A salt and water is always produced.
Salt Preparation
Rules for Solubility:
All sodium, potassium and ammonium compounds are soluble.
All chlorides except silver chloride are soluble.
All sulphates are soluble, except for barium and calcium sulphate.
All hydroxides are insoluble, except sodium, potassium and ammonium.
All nitrates are soluble.
Precipitation
This is used to prepare insoluble salts. Two solutions are mixed, each one containing one of the
necessary ions. On mixing, the ions combine and form the salt, which precipitates. This is filtered off,
rinsed and left to dry. For example, to make Barium Sulphate, two solutions are needed, one of
Barium Nitrate, one of Sodium Sulphate (both are soluble). The solutions are mixed, the precipitate
filtered, rinsed and left to dry.
Equation:
Ba(NO
3
)
2
(aq)+Na
2
SO
4
(aq) BaSO
4
(s)+2NaNO
3
(aq)
Ba(NO
3
)
2
(aq)+Na
2
SO
4
(aq) BaSO
4
(s)+2NaNO
3
(aq)
Ionic equation:
Ba
2+
(aq)+SO
4
2--
(aq) BaSO
4
(s)
Ba
2+
(aq)+SO
4
2--
(aq) BaSO
4
(s)
Note that the ionic equation for the formation of any salt follows this simple pattern, of two
aqueous ions combining to make the precipitate, e.g.:
Ag
+
(aq)+Cl
--
(aq) AgCl(s)
Ag
+
(aq)+Cl
--
(aq) AgCl(s)
40
Titration
This is used to prepare soluble salts from an acid and a soluble base. It is normally used to prepare
sodium, potassium and ammonium salts. A known volume of acid is measured into a conical flask,
using a pipette, and some indicator is added. The alkali is placed in a burette and slowly added into
the indicator shows the solution is now neutral. The amount of alkali is noted, and the experiment is
repeated, until concordant titres are found. The titre is then added again, but this time no indicator
is added. The solution is then boiled till it is saturated, and then slowly heated till it crystallises.
Reaction of an Acid with an Insoluble Base
This method is used to prepare soluble salts, from an insoluble base. The acid is placed in a beaker
and warmed with a Bunsen burner. The insoluble metal oxide or carbonate is added and stirred. It is
added until it stops disappearing, and is in excess the reaction is complete. It can now be filtered
off, leaving the pure salt solution behind. The solution is now gently warmed until it is saturated, and
then it is left to crystallise.
te at
oe
it a
oim
potaim or
ammonim
at
t i a oe
at t not a
oim
potaim or
ammonim
at
e otion
o te
appropriate
meta nitrate
an oim
at.
e otion
o te
appropriate
ai an
aai a
or
e te
appropriate
ai an
meta
aronate or
oie
O
O
S
S
e.g. barium sulphate
e.g. potassium chloride
e.g. nickel nitrate
e.g. use BA
nitrate + sodium
LPAT
solutions
e.g. use
DCLC
acid +
PTA
hydroxide
e.g. use TC
acid + CL
carbonate or
oxide
41
Energetics
All chemical reactions result in a conversion of energy. Chemical reactions which release heat energy
are exothermic, and those which take in heat energy are endothermic. Due to the conservation of
energy, exothermic reactions result in the chemical energy of the products decreasing, and
endothermic reactions have the chemical energy of the products increasing.
Enthalpy is the chemical energy change, and is given the symbol . is always given in terms of
the chemicals, and not the surroundings. This means exothermic reactions have negative enthalpy
changes, and endothermic reactions have positive ones.
Measuring Enthalpy Changes
It is possible to measure the enthalpy change by using a reaction to heat or cool a known mass of
water. The enthalpy change can be measured by using the formula:
= m c T
Where: = energy supplied by water (joules), m = mass of water (grams), c = specific heat capacity
of water (4.2J/g/C), and T = the change in temperature of the water (C). Since an increase in the
temperature of the water means a decrease in the energy of the chemicals, to find the enthalpy
change of the reaction, use:
H=-mcT
42
If the reaction occurs in solution, the mass of the solution is used.
Enthalpy change is commonly given per mole, and the molar enthalpy change is given in kilojoules
per mole.
e.g. 100g of water were placed in a copper calorimeter above a fuel burner containing hexane,
C
6
H
14
. Burning the hexane caused the temperature of the water to rise from 18 to 44. The mass of
the burner decreased from 98.30g to 97.87g. What is the enthalpy of combustion of 1 mole of
hexane?
Formula mass of hexane = 6 x 12 + 14 x 1 = 86
Temperature rise = 44 18 = 26C
Mass of hexane burned = 98.30 97.87 = 0.43
Moles of hexane burned = mass / molar mass = 0.43 / 86 = 0.005 mol
Energy supplied to water = m c T = 100g x 4.2 J/g/C x 26C = 10920 J
So Enthalpy change = - m c T = -10920 J
Enthalpy change per mol = -10920J / 0.005 mol = -2184000 J/mol
H = -2184 kJ/mol
Calculating Enthalpy Changes
Making bonds releases energy and breaking them requires energy.
43
To calculate the enthalpy change for any reaction:
1. Write a balanced equation for the reaction.
2. Find the total bond energy of every bond in the reactant molecules, remembering to take
into account the balancing numbers (it may help to draw out the molecules).
3. Find the total bond energy of every bond in the product molecules, remembering to take
into account the balancing numbers.
4. The overall enthalpy change is given by:
H = bond energy of reactants bond energy of products
e.g. Whatistheenthalpychangewhenonemoleofmethaneisburned?
CH
4
+ 2O
2
CO
2
+ 2H
2
O
CH
4
+ 2O
2
CO
2
+ 2H
2
O
C H
H
H
H
+
O O
C O O
O O
+
O
H H
O
H H
BOND C H
O O
C O
O H
BONDDISSOCIATIONENTHALPY
(kJ/mol)
412 496 743 463
Cokemainlyconsistsofcarbon.Madebypurifyingcoal.
Limestonecalciumcarbonate,CaCO
3
Hot air is fed through the bottom. The coke burns in this air:
This reaction is exothermic, and heats up the furnace. The carbon
dioxide then reacts with more coke to form carbon monoxide:
The carbon monoxide reacts with the haematite, to form molten
iron and carbon dioxide.
The calcium carbonate thermally decomposes to form calcium oxide
and carbon dioxide:
The Calcium oxide reacts with the silicon oxide (an impurity in
haematite) to make calcium silicate, which forms slag, floating
above the molten iron. Slag is used for road surfacing and making
cement:
In the process, the iron oxide is reduced, and the carbon monoxide is oxidised.
47
Aluminium Extraction
The main ore of aluminium is bauxite, which consists of alumina (aluminium oxide). Aluminium is
above Carbon in the reactivity series, so it must be displaced with electrolysis.
Aluminium Oxide has a high melting point, and is insoluble in water, and so is dissolved in molten
cryolite, so it can be electrolysed. The cryolite is at 900 degrees, whereas molten aluminium oxide
would be at 2000 degrees. This means using cryolite is cheaper and easier. The cathode is the lining
of the cell, and the anodes are the large blocks dipped in the electrolyte. The electrodes are made of
graphite. The molten aluminium, after forming on the cathode, sinks to the bottom, and is tapped
off. The hot oxygen reacts with the electrodes, forming carbon dioxide, and so they often need
replacing. This process is expensive due to the electricity needed.
The aluminium oxide consists of aluminium ions (Al
3+
) and oxide ions (O
2-
). The aluminium ions
(cations) are attracted to the cathode, where they are reduced to aluminium atoms:
Al
3+
+ 3e
--
Al
Al
3+
+ 3e
--
Al
The oxide ions (anions) are attracted to the anodes, where they are oxidised to oxygen gas:
2O
2--
O
2
+ 4e
--
2O
2--
O
2
+ 4e
--
Uses of Iron
It is very cheap and abundant, and therefore used in lots of things:
Pig iron which is straight from the blast furnace can be moulded. If it is remelted and
remoulded, it is cast iron and is very impure (4% carbon). This is very hard and brittle, and
used in manhole covers and guttering.
Steel which has 1.5% carbon is called high-carbon steel, and is very hard but brittle. It is used
in drill bits.
48
Mild steel contains 0.25% iron, and is stronger and harder. This is used in car bodies, girders
and ships.
Pure iron, also called wrought iron, is used as decorative railings, as it is soft and malleable.
If the iron is alloyed with chromium and nickel, stainless steel is formed. This protects the
iron from rust and corrosion. It is used in cutlery, kitchen sinks, and in gardening tools.
Uses of Aluminium
Aluminium is not very strong, and is used as an alloy, due to its low density, corrosion resistance and
as it is a good conductor. It is used in aircraft (low density, corrosion resistance, strength when
alloyed), saucepans (low density, corrosion resistance, high thermal conductivity); high-voltage
power cables (low density; corrosion resistance; high electrical conductivity the cables have a steel
core to increase strength).
Crude Oil
Crude Oil Processing
Crude Oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons. These are simple covalently bonded molecules, with weak
intermolecular forces.
Fractional distillation is used to separate crude oil into useful components (fractions). The more
carbon atoms the molecule contains, the stronger the intermolecular forces and the higher its
boiling point.
The crude oil is heated to around 350C in a furnace, and the compounds in the oil enter the bottom
of the fractional distillation tower as a mixture of gases. They rise up the tower, and as they do so,
they cool down. When a molecule reaches a temperature below its boiling point, it condenses, turns
to a liquid and falls down the tower, to be collected in a series of trays. The compounds with a
similar boiling point condense in the same area, and are removed as part of the same fraction. The
compounds with the lowest boiling points reach the top of the tower without condensing, and are
removed as part of the refinery gases section.
There are many types of hydrocarbon straight chain, branched chain, and ring molecules but the
carbon always forms four bonds, and the hydrogen one. Crude oil consists of mostly alkanes.
Cracking
If alkane vapour is passed over a heated catalyst, it thermally decomposes. The alkane is broken
down into two smaller molecules, an alkane and an alkene, or an alkene and hydrogen. If an alkane
and an alkene are produced, the alkene is usually smaller. The hydrogen can be burned as a fuel to
power the refinery. The catalyst is a mixture of silicon dioxide and aluminium oxide, and this is done
as 500 degrees centigrade. Cracking is very useful, as it breaks down the longer, less useful alkanes
found in crude oil such as diesel and naptha into shorter alkanes like petrol, which is in high demand,
and into alkenes, which are more reactive than alkanes, and are can be used to make plastics.
catalyst HEAT
C
8
H
18
catalyst
catalyst
HEAT
HEAT
C
6
H
14
+C
2
H
4
catalyst HEAT
C
8
H
18
catalyst
catalyst
HEAT
HEAT
C
6
H
14
+C
2
H
4
C
8
H
18
C
8
H
16
+H
2
C
8
H
18
C
8
H
16
+H
2
49
Polymerisation
Addition
Alkenes can add to other alkenes, and the monomers join to form polymers.
50
C C C C C
H
H
H
H
H
H
H
H H
H
C
H
H
C C
H
H H
H
C C
H
H H
H
C C
H
H H
H
High temperature and pressure
Catalyst
The chain above shows three repeat units, with one repeat unit being a length of polymer
made from a single monomer.
Polymers:
Name Monomer Repeat Unit Notes, Uses, and
Properties
Poly(ethene)
Ethene Also called polythene,
and is used to make
plastic bags, carrier
bottles and packaging.
Poly(propene)
Propene Commonly called
polypropylene, it is
used to make ropes,
crates, and many
other items.
Poly(chloroethene)
Chloroethene Commonly called PVC,
it is the strong rigid
material used to make
doors, window frames
and drainpipes.
Drawing Polymers
To draw a polymer, draw out a monomer so that the C=C bond is horizontal, and all the other groups
are vertical. Then break the C=C double bond, and draw the new bonds at the side, then add the
brackets.
51
H
3
C
C C
CH
3
CH
3
redraw C C
CH
3
H
CH
3
CH
3
C C
CH
3
CH
3
H CH
3
polymerise
2-methylbut-2-ene poly(2-methylbut-2-ene)
H
To find the monomer from which a polymer is made, isolate two adjacent carbon atoms, and then
replace the C=C double bond.
C C C C C C
CH
3
H CH
3
H CH
3
H
Cl H Cl H Cl H
is made from
C C
CH
3
H
Cl H
The name of a polymer is always poly followed by the name of monomer in brackets e.g.
ethene goes to poly(ethene)
Condensation Polymerisation
A condensation reaction can be used to join many monomers to form a polymer, and this reaction
differs from addition reactions as different monomers are used.
If one monomer contains an OH group, and the other contains an H, these combine to form water.
The remainders of the monomers join to form the condensation polymer.
Polyamides
One of the most important condensation polymers is nylon, which is used in ropes, carpets and clothing. Nylon
is a polyamide, which is made from a carboxylic acid (-COOH) and an amine (-NH
2
). Each of the monomers is
double ended, which lets them join together alternately by forming an amide link (-CONH-) to make the
polymer. This can be seen below, with the central portion of the monomers being represented by a block:
C
OH
O
C
O H
O
N
H
H
N
H
H
C
O
N
H
C
O
N
H
O
H H
+
Polyesters
Polyesters are condensation polymers, which are like polyamides, but are formed from a carboxylic
acid (-COOH), and an alcohol (-OH), and both monomers are double ended. This results in the
formation of an ester link (-COO-), with water being produced as a side product.
52
C
OH
O
C
O H
O
O
H
O
H
C
O
O C
O
O
O
H H
+
Polyesters such as terylene are used to manufacture material for clothing.
O H C
2
H
4
OH HOOC C
6
H
4
COOH
+
C
O
C
6
H
4
C
O
O C
2
H
4
O
O
H H
+
Chemical Manufacture
The Haber Process
This is the combination of hydrogen and nitrogen to make ammonia.
N
2
(g) + 3H
2
(g) 2NH
3
(g)
N
2
(g) + 3H
2
(g) 2NH
3
(g)
Thehydrogenisobtainedbyreactedmethanewithsteam,orbycrackinghydrocarbons:
Ni
CH
4
(g) + H
2
O(g)
Ni
Ni
CO(g) + 3H
2
(g)
Ni
CH
4
(g) + H
2
O(g)
Ni
Ni
CO(g) + 3H
2
(g)
heat cataly st
C
10
H
22
heat
heat
cataly st
cataly st
C
10
H
20
+ H
2
heat cataly st
C
10
H
22
heat
heat
cataly st
cataly st
C
10
H
20
+ H
2
Thenitrogenisobtainedfromtheair.
Thehydrogenandnitrogenarefedintothereactionvesselintheratioof3:1respectively.The
reactionisreversible:
N
2
(g) + 3H
2
(g) 2NH
3
(g)
N
2
(g) + 3H
2
(g) 2NH
3
(g)
H=-92kJ/mol
Temperature: 450C
Pressure: 200atmospheres
Catalyst: Finelydividediron
The forward reaction is exothermic, so the temperature is low enough to give a reasonable yield, but high
enough to produce that yield at an acceptable rate. The iron catalyst increases the rate of the reactions.
Increasing the pressure increases the rate of the forward reaction, and also increases the rate, but a too high
pressure is dangerous and expensive, meaning a pressure of 200 atmospheres is used. The yield of ammonia is
15%, and the mixtures of gases which leave the vessel are cooled, until the ammonia condenses, and is
53
removed as a liquid. The hydrogen and oxygen are recycled into the reaction vessel. The ammonia produced is
used to manufacture fertilisers, and to make nitric acid.
The Contact Process
This is the manufacture of Sulphuric Acid.
Firstly, sulphur is burned in oxygen to make sulphur dioxide.
S(s) + O
2
(g) SO
2
(g)
S(s) + O
2
(g) SO
2
(g)
Thesulphurdioxideisthenreactedwithmoreoxygentoproducesulphurtrioxide:
2SO
2
(g) + O
2
(g) 2SO
3
(g)
2SO
2
(g) + O
2
(g) 2SO
3
(g)
Thisisareversiblereaction,andtheforwardreactionisexothermic,sothetemperatureisa
compromisebetweenahigheryieldandafastrateofreaction.Increasingthepressure
wouldincreasetheyieldandincreasetherate,buttheyieldisalreadyveryhighatone
atmosphere,sothepressureiskeptlow.Thecatalystincreasestherateofreaction.
Temperature: 450C
Pressure: 1-2atm
Catalyst: Vanadium(V)oxideV
2
O
5
Thesulphurtrioxidewilldissolveinwatertoformsulphuricacid,butthisisincredibly
exothermic,andwillvaporisethesolution.Instead,thesulphurtrioxideisdissolvedin
concentratedsulphuricacid,togiveoleum.Wateristhenaddedtotheoleum,producing
concentratedsulphuricacid.
H
2
SO
4
(l) + SO
3
(g) H
2
S
2
O
7
(l)
H
2
SO
4
(l) + SO
3
(g) H
2
S
2
O
7
(l)
H
2
S
2
O
7
(l) + H
2
O(l) 2H
2
SO
4
(l)
H
2
S
2
O
7
(l) + H
2
O(l) 2H
2
SO
4
(l)
Sulphuricacidisusedinthemanufactureoffertilisers,manufactureofdetergents,and
manufactureofpaints.
450C
200 atm
iron catalyst
Cooling
H2 and N2
Nitrogen from fractional
distillation of liquid air
Hydrogen from natural gas
and steam
Unreacted gases
NH3
Liquid
NH3