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Raw material for Polymers

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Raw material for Polymers

  1. 1. Fundamentals of Polymer Engineering Raw Materials of Polymers 6/28/2020 1 Course Code: PE-3107 Credits: 3-0-3 Teacher: Engr. Asra Tariq Email Id: asra.tariq@ntu.edu.pk
  2. 2. Raw Materials  Monomers: vinyl chloride, ethylene, propylene and similar simple hydrocarbons  Chemical intermediates : phenol, formaldehyde, hexamethylenetetramine, phthalic anhydride, methyl acrylate and methacrylate  Other raw materials: plasticizers, fillers, and reinforcements are also added to alter the properties of the plastic products. 6/28/2020 2
  3. 3. Primary Source of Monomers  The most important primary sources of synthetic polymers are crude oil, natural gas and, to a minor extent, coal.  Both oil and natural gas can be used to make polyethylene for example. 6/28/2020 3
  4. 4. Crude Oil  Crude oil is a naturally occurring, unrefined petroleum product composed of hydrocarbon deposits and other organic materials.  A type of fossil fuel, crude oil can be refined to produce usable products such as gasoline, diesel and various forms of petrochemicals.  It is a non-renewable resource, which means that it can't be replaced naturally at the rate we consume it and is therefore a limited resource. 6/28/2020 4
  5. 5. Formation of Crude Oil  Microscopic plants and animals die and fall to the sea bed  Crude oil forms when organic matter is buried deep underground in an oxygen free environment. Over millions of years the carbon rich compounds from the bodies of dead organism are subjected to high temperature and pressure which changed them into hydrocarbons. Natural gas (mainly methane CH4), an important fossil fuel is also found trapped with crude oil under rock sediments. Oil obtained by drilling. 6/28/2020 5
  6. 6. Extraction and Transport of Crude Oil  Crude oil, natural gas or coal can be extracted from under the sea or land, where they have remained trapped for millions of years. Companies like Shell and BP have invested billions of pounds exploiting oil under the North Sea, just off the coast of Scotland. The North Sea has about 45 oil platforms producing up to four million barrels a day. England has sufficient oil reserves meeting its current demand for the next forty years. 6/28/2020 6
  7. 7. Processing of Crude Oil  Close to where it is stored, oil refineries process crude oil so that it can be more useful to us. There is a great demand for fuels like petrol and deiseal and of course natural gas for heating. 6/28/2020 7
  8. 8. Distillation of Crude Oil  Crude oil is a mixture of different hydrocarbons. They can be separated by fractional distillation according to their boiling point which change according to their size (carbon atoms) The most volatile fraction, i.e with the lowest boiling point evaporates off first and goes to the top of the column. The remaining, longer chain hydrocarbons also separate out according to their boiling points 6/28/2020 8
  9. 9. 6/28/2020 9
  10. 10. Distillation of Crude Oil  The various components of crude oil have different sizes, weights and boiling temperatures; so, the first step is to separate these components. Because they have different boiling temperatures, they can be separated easily by a process called fractional distillation. The steps of fractional distillation are as follows:  You heat the mixture of two or more substances (liquids) with different boiling points to a high temperature. Heating is usually done with high pressure steam to temperatures of about 1112 degrees Fahrenheit / 600 degrees Celsius.  The mixture boils, forming vapor (gases); most substances go into the vapor phase.  The vapor enters the bottom of a long column (fractional distillation column) that is filled with trays or plates. The trays have many holes or bubble caps (like a loosened cap on a soda bottle) in them to allow the vapor to pass through. They increase the contact time between the vapor and the liquids in the column and help to collect liquids that form at various heights in the column. There is a temperature difference across the column (hot at the bottom, cool at the top).  The vapor rises in the column.  As the vapor rises through the trays in the column, it cools.  When a substance in the vapor reaches a height where the temperature of the column is equal to that substance's boiling point, it will condense to form a liquid. (The substance with the lowest boiling point will condense at the highest point in the column; substances with higher boiling points will condense lower in the column.).  The trays collect the various liquid fractions.  The collected liquid fractions may pass to condensers, which cool them further, and then go to storage tanks, or they may go to other areas for further chemical processing  Fractional distillation is useful for separating a mixture of substances with narrow differences in boiling points, and is the most important step in the refining process. 6/28/2020 10
  11. 11. Petrochemicals  petrochemical” is any chemical derived, directly or indirectly from petroleum or natural gas or obtained from hydrocarbons and utilized in industrial & household markets.  The petrochemical industry produces various kinds of chemical products such as polymers, fibers or rubber, from such raw materials as petroleum, LPG, natural gas and other hydrocarbons through many different production processes. Hydrocarbons, the source material, are used to produce a variety of components including ethylene, propylene, butadiene and pyrolysis gasoline through non- catalytic thermal decomposition reaction with steam (steam cracking). 6/28/2020 11
  12. 12. Process Involved  Cracking: Thermal cracking. Catalytic cracking.  Reforming: Catalytic reforming. Steam reforming. 6/28/2020 12
  13. 13. Chemical Products produced from Crude Oil 6/28/2020 13
  14. 14. Ethylene Derivatives 6/28/2020 14
  15. 15. Propylene Derivatives 6/28/2020 15
  16. 16. Benzene Derivatives 6/28/2020 16
  17. 17. Other Crude Oil Aromatic Derivatives 6/28/2020 17

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