Lieutenant_21
Member
re: HSC Chemistry Marathon Archive
It is true that the catalyst lowers the energy required from 850 to 500 but but catalytic cracking cannot decompose large alkanes into ethylene completely so it is insufficient and thermal cracking is required so should you mention this? Is it related to the catalyst?
Thickett textbook (jacaranda chem) explains this very well (it is the best textbook IMO but extremely detailed):
1) The many cavities and channels inside the porous catalyst provide a high internal surface area for reaction.
2) Lower temperature (about 500ºC) can then be used and this produces considerable savings in energy.
3) Hydrogen atoms are removed from the hydrocarbons onto the catalyst’s surface. The positive hydrocarbon ion that forms undergoes further reactions leading to the formation of the final products.
I think the proper name for the catalyst is "zeolite- porous crystalline aluminosilicate"3 properties??? =L
Pouros aluminosilicate (this doesnt really constributte anything to the question and i dont really know what it means but i think its a property). Very fine and (increase surface area) and can thus catalyst the reaction at a faster rate? Lowers the activation energy allowing the process in the cat cracker to be effectuated at 500 degrees instead of 850. idk..
It is true that the catalyst lowers the energy required from 850 to 500 but but catalytic cracking cannot decompose large alkanes into ethylene completely so it is insufficient and thermal cracking is required so should you mention this? Is it related to the catalyst?
Thickett textbook (jacaranda chem) explains this very well (it is the best textbook IMO but extremely detailed):
1) The many cavities and channels inside the porous catalyst provide a high internal surface area for reaction.
2) Lower temperature (about 500ºC) can then be used and this produces considerable savings in energy.
3) Hydrogen atoms are removed from the hydrocarbons onto the catalyst’s surface. The positive hydrocarbon ion that forms undergoes further reactions leading to the formation of the final products.
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