That is a great response Loz_metalhead
however, in exam conditions, students need to be able to summarize this information into a more succinct form so that it is easily followed by the examiner. This of course ensures that you get the maximum marks
(i would also recommend organizing your notes in point form. Markers often prefer a more visual response which makes uses of labelled diagrams, point form, tables, steps or even flow diagrams)
The syllabus requirement is:
summarize the processes involved in the industrial production of ethanol from sugar cane
A more succinct, simple response would be:
- ethanol may be produced by the fermentation of sugars which are found in molasses such as sugar cane
- fermentation is the process that converts glucose into ethanol and CO2
- conditions of fermentation include:
~ catalysts that are found in yeast which contain enzymes called
zymase, catalysing glycolysis i.e. the conversion of glucose
to ethanol
~ aqueous solution of sugar to which yeast is added
~ anaerobic conditions i.e. the absence of oxygen
~ high temperatures (37 degrees celsius)
- overall equation for the fermentation of glucose is:
zymase
C6H12O6 (aq) ------> 2C2H5OH(aq) + 2CO2 (g)
(word eqn: glucose ---> ethanol + carbon dioxide)
- the concentration of ethanol that may be produced is only about 15% fo the mixture. Above this level, yeast is killed by ethanol and fermentation stops
- to produce higher conentrations of ethanol, the mixture is purified using fractional distillation (this is an expensive process)
also, Loz_metalhead, your dehydration confusion can be easily solved...
dehydration is indeed part of the process, however it is unimportant and need not be mentioned in an exam reponse if it confuses you. In this case, dehydration just means getting rid of the water molecules remaining in mixture to increase the purity of ethanol
However, do not get this confused with the dehydration of ethanol which is another syllabus point, where dehydration means the conversion of ethanol into ethene
in summary, there are two 'types' of dehydration:
1. the one mentioned by Loz_metalhead which is involved in the purification of ethanol when it is obtained from sugar cane. This is just a process that gets rid of the water
2. by far the more important dehydration that is explicitly mentioned in the chemistry syllabus which says...
syllabus point:
describe the dehydration of ethanol into ethylene and identify the need for a catalyst in this process and the catalyst used
briefly, this syllabus dot point requires the following reponse:
- dehydration is the conversion of ethanol into ethene (AKA ethylene)
- ethanol can be dehydrated to ethene using concentrated sulfuric acid
conc. H2SO4
ethanol -------------> ethene + H20
therefore, it is best to leave out the dehydration in the purification of ethanol if it confuses you, as dehydration for the chemistry syllabus means the conversion of ethanol into ethene using concentrated sulfuric acid
Here are a few more hints for chemistry:
i recommend going through the whole syllabus as you learn it at school and write succinct, point form / visual notes
only learn what is needed for the course, do not overburden yourself with too much unnecessary information. Ask your teacher what is required in an exam response so you don't write unnecessary information that won't get you marks. You can also ask me since i have had experience with what the markers are looking for in responses
at the end of each huge topic, draw up a simple flow diagram so you can organize your thoughts in a visual manner
anyways, i hope that helped ^^...
email me if you need any help with maths, physics or chemistry. I have lots of notes directly addressing the HSC syllabus
Best of luck!