Students helping students, join us in improving Bored of Studies by donating and supporting future students!
Products formed are ethylene and an alkane.Is ethylene always one of the products formed from Catalytic cracking? If not then how do I determine the products?
No, it's not always ethylene which forms. What you get from cracking a longer hydrocarbon chain is a smaller alkene (any smaller alkene, not necessarily ethylene - though propene and ethylene will be the two greatest constituents of the mixture) and alkane. That's why we distil the products of cracking, to isolate the ethylene.Is ethylene always one of the products formed from Catalytic cracking? If not then how do I determine the products?
Guys, do not try this at home.It's like taking a stick and snapping it in half.
They can't mark you wrong for writing any smaller alkene and alkane, but since ethylene is course relevant yeah, you'd be better off writing that. Remember that if you're cracking decane and one of the products is ethylene the other will have to be octane to make sure you end up with the same number of carbon atoms you started with.Ok so let's say there is a question asking to show the catalyctic cracking of a long chainedhydrocarbon such as decane would the safest option be assuming it's either ethene or propene?