Fractional distillation of crude oil
I can describe how crude oil can be separated into fractions using fractional distillation, and describe the differences in properties between fractions.
Fractional distillation of crude oil
I can describe how crude oil can be separated into fractions using fractional distillation, and describe the differences in properties between fractions.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Crude oil is a non-renewable mixture of different hydrocarbons and impurities.
- Crude oil can be separated into groups of hydrocarbon molecules of similar size, called fractions.
- Most of the hydrocarbon molecules in crude oil are alkanes.
- Smaller hydrocarbon molecules have lower boiling points, are more flammable, and are less viscous.
- Fractions of crude oil include petroleum gases, petrol, kerosene, diesel oil, heavy fuel oil, and bitumen.
Common misconception
Some students may think that fractional distillation produces new substances from crude oil.
It is important to emphasise that crude oil is a mixture, and the process of fractional distillation is to separate out the different hydrocarbons based on their boiling points.
Keywords
Crude oil - Crude oil is a fossil fuel formed over millions of years from dead plankton. It is a mixture of different hydrocarbons and impurities.
Hydrocarbon - Hydrocarbons are covalent compounds containing hydrogen and carbon atoms only.
Viscosity - Viscosity is how easily a liquid flows. The higher the viscosity, the less easily a liquid flows.
Fractional distillation - Fractional distillation is a method used to separate miscible fluids (liquids or gases) with different boiling points into individual components (fractions).
Fraction - A fraction is a part of a mixture that has been separated by fractional distillation.
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
how easily a liquid flows
the ease with which a substance will ignite
a separation technique that uses boiling and condensation
a part of a mixture that has been separated by fractional distillation
saturated hydrocarbons