Producing Alkenes (Cambridge (CIE) A Level Chemistry)
Revision Note
Production of Alkenes: Elimination, Dehydration & Cracking
Alkenes can be made by a series of reactions including elimination, dehydration reactions and cracking
Elimination reaction
Alkenes can be produced from the elimination reaction of a halogenoalkane
An elimination reaction is one in which a small molecule is lost
In the case of halogenoalkanes, the small molecule that is eliminated is a hydrogen halide, HX, where X is the halogen
The halogenoalkane is heated with ethanolic sodium hydroxide
Making alkenes from halogenoalkanes
Production of an alkene from a halogenoalkane by reacting it with ethanolic sodium hydroxide and heating it
The eliminated H+ in HBr reacts with the ethanolic OH- to form water
The eliminated Br- in HBr reacts with Na+ to form NaBr
Overview of halogenoalkane elimination
The eliminated HBr reacts with ethanolic OH- and Na+ to form H2O and NaBr
Note that the reaction conditions should be stated correctly as different reaction conditions will result in different types of organic reactions
NaOH (ethanol): an elimination reaction occurs to form an alkene
NaOH (aq): a nucleophilic substitution reaction occurs, and an alcohol is one of the products
Comparing reaction conditions
Different reaction conditions will give different products
Dehydration reaction
Alkenes can also be produced from the elimination reaction of alcohols in which a water molecule is lost
This is also called a dehydration reaction
Alcohol vapour is passed over a hot catalyst of aluminium oxide powder (Al2O3)
Concentrated acid, pieces of porous pot or pumice can also be used as catalysts
Making alkenes from alcchols
Production of an alkene from an alcohol by using a hot aluminium oxide powder catalyst
Overview of alcohol elimination
The formation of ethene from ethanol is an example of a dehydration reaction of alcohol
The smaller alkenes (such as ethene, propene and butene) are all gases at room temperature and can be collected over water
Practical set-up to form alkenes from alcohol
The smaller alkenes are gases at room temperature and collected over water
Cracking
Alkenes can also be produced from the cracking of long hydrocarbon molecules in crude oil
An aluminium oxide (Al2O3) catalyst and high temperatures are used to speed up this reaction.
It is important to ensure that the crude oil doesn’t come into contact with oxygen as this can cause the combustion of the hydrocarbons to produce water and carbon dioxide
The cracking of crude oil produces smaller alkane and alkene molecules
Cracking hydrocarbons
Long hydrocarbon fraction is cracked into two smaller ones
The low-molecular mass alkenes are more reactive than alkanes as they have an electron-rich double bond
They can therefore be used as feedstock for making new products
Possible compounds formed from alkenes
Alkenes are reactive molecules and can undergo many different types of reactions making them useful as starting compounds
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