Cracking (Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry (Modular))

Revision Note

Stewart Hird

Expertise

Chemistry Lead

Cracking hydrocarbons

What is cracking?

  • Cracking is an industrial process used to break low demand, long chain hydrocarbon molecules into more useful, small chain hydrocarbon molecules

    • Any long chain hydrocarbon can be cracked into smaller chain hydrocarbons

    • For example, kerosene and diesel oil are often cracked to produce petrol, alkenes and hydrogen

Conditions for catalytic cracking

  • Catalytic cracking involves heating the hydrocarbon molecules to around 600 – 700 °C to vaporise them

  • The vapours then pass over a hot powdered catalyst of aluminium oxide

  • This process breaks covalent bonds in the molecules as they come into contact with the surface of the catalyst, causing thermal decomposition reactions

Products of cracking

  • The molecules are broken up in a random way which produces a mixture of shorter alkanes and alkenes

    • Alkanes are saturated molecules containing carbon-carbon single bonds only

    • Alkenes are unsaturated molecules containing carbon=carbon double bonds

Example of cracking

Cracking-Decane, IGCSE & GCSE Chemistry revision notes

Decane is cracked to produce octane for petrol and ethene for ethanol synthesis

Fraction supply & demand

  • Fractional distillation separates crude oil into fractions containing hydrocarbons of similar chain lengths

  • Each fraction has different values for its supply and demand

    • Supply is how much of a particular fraction can be produced from refining the crude oil

    • Demand is how much customers want to buy

  • The demand for certain fractions outstrips the supply so cracking is used to convert excess unwanted fractions into more useful ones

  • You can see from the chart that fuel oil and bitumen are surplus fractions so they are cracked and modified to produce petrol, kerosene and diesel

Supply & demand of crude oil fractions

Supply & Demand of Crude oil Fractions

Demand for short chain hydrocarbon molecules such as petrol, kerosene and diesel is greater than the supply, while demand for long chain hydrocarbons such as fuel oil is less than the supply

Exam Tip

Remember that cracking is an endothermic reaction.

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Stewart Hird

Author: Stewart Hird

Stewart has been an enthusiastic GCSE, IGCSE, A Level and IB teacher for more than 30 years in the UK as well as overseas, and has also been an examiner for IB and A Level. As a long-standing Head of Science, Stewart brings a wealth of experience to creating Topic Questions and revision materials for Save My Exams. Stewart specialises in Chemistry, but has also taught Physics and Environmental Systems and Societies.