fatassmcfat
Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2012
- Messages
- 118
- Gender
- Undisclosed
- HSC
- 2014
1) When you have ethene + X = Y, will Y be called (Xethene) or (Xethane)? Because its become saturated, so shouldnt it be called Xethane? or do you retain the name of the original hydrocarbon ethene?
2) Say you have polyethene chain, and it consists of 3 ethene monomers. So the name of it is C6H14- but isnt that hexane? Or is hexane a type of polyethene chain? But then at the same time I'm confused- cause shouldn't a polyethene chain never end since each monomer only has 4 H's (and on the first and last monomer of this chain you would need 5 H's to complete it)?
3) what is the major source of ethene according to the syllabus/what the markers wanna know? (my teacher said thermal cracking, conquerinq chem says steam cracking and some places say steam/thermal are the same thing)
Also does anyone know if theres a set percentage of the HSC exam which requires calculations in proportion to writing bits (im assuming quite a lot since chem is good scaling)?
THANKS
2) Say you have polyethene chain, and it consists of 3 ethene monomers. So the name of it is C6H14- but isnt that hexane? Or is hexane a type of polyethene chain? But then at the same time I'm confused- cause shouldn't a polyethene chain never end since each monomer only has 4 H's (and on the first and last monomer of this chain you would need 5 H's to complete it)?
3) what is the major source of ethene according to the syllabus/what the markers wanna know? (my teacher said thermal cracking, conquerinq chem says steam cracking and some places say steam/thermal are the same thing)
Also does anyone know if theres a set percentage of the HSC exam which requires calculations in proportion to writing bits (im assuming quite a lot since chem is good scaling)?
THANKS