eunkuk91 said:
can anyone give me a hand on how to get a 6 mark on the dot point/question
"discuss the need for alternative sources of the compounds presently obtained from the petrochemical industry" ?
Discuss: identify issues and provide reasons for or against.
Presently compounds obtained for the petrochemical industry come from the cracking of those long chained (c10-c40 i think) in crude oil (petroleum) and natural gas - either steam thermal or catalytic cracking on the fractions recieved from distillation. This is a concern as crude oil supplies are expected to diminish in the next 10yrs and natural gas in the next 100; due to them both being non-renewable resources (take millions of years to produce). This will see prices rise proportionally to their limiting amounts and so economic stress will be placed on families internationally. There will be a decline in transport, the amount of people owning cars and could result in a depression. Wars may break out in the search for the last oil supplies.
The products from this cracking process are the petrochemicals (i.e. deisel, LPG etc) which we use to maufacture plastics and as fuel. When used, they emmit greenhouse gases to contribute to global warming (90% USA greenhouse contributed from fossil fuel consumption) and release oxides of nitrogen and sulphur contributing to acid rain (throw in those equations). They also release heavy metals which are toxic. As populations and the rise in motor vehicles increases, along with increases in taxations on fossil fuels in attempts to minimise their use and encourage the development of alternatives, we must search elsewhere for these founding chemicals if we are to, in the future, have a source of energy for fuel, plastic manufacturing and other industrial processes.
i didnt have my notes. ill look at them and correct the figures as i wouldnt bet my life on them. im sure other people have stuff to add