Category Chemistry

WHAT HAPPENS AT AN OIL REFINERY?

An oil refinery is an industrial plant that refines crude oil into petroleum products such as diesel, gasoline and heating oils. Oil refineries essentially serve as the second stage in the production process following the actual extraction of crude oil by rigs. The first step in the refining process is distillation, where crude oil is heated at extreme temperatures to separate the different hydrocarbons.

Oil refineries serve an important role in the production of transportation and other fuels. The crude oil components, once separated, can be sold to different industries for a broad range of purposes. Lubricants can be sold to industrial plants immediately after distillation, but other products require more refining before reaching the final user. Major refineries have the capacity to process hundreds of thousand barrels of crude oil daily.

In the industry, the refining process is commonly called the “downstream” sector, while raw crude oil production is known as the “upstream” sector. The term downstream is associated with the concept that oil is sent down the product value chain to an oil refinery to be processed into fuel. The downstream stage also includes the actual sale of petroleum products to other businesses, governments or private individuals.

  • Crude oil is piped in and heated. As the different chemicals (or ‘fractions’) in the oil get hotter they start to boil and turn into gases (or ‘evaporate’).
  • Each fraction boils at a different temperature. The ones with the lowest boiling points stay as gases for longest. They rise to the top of the column as they cool. The liquids with higher boiling points do not stay as gases for long, so they do not rise far.
  • As each gas cools it turns back into a liquid (or ‘condenses’). The condensing liquids are collected at different levels in the column.
  • Oil is full of useful chemicals. Did you know we get fuels, soaps, tar and some of the ingredients for drugs from the chemicals in oil?
  • Certain fractions are mixed to give plastic making chemicals.

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WHERE DO PLASTICS COME FROM?

Most plastics come from chemicals in crude oil. However as the world’s a reserve of crude oil begin to run out; coal and gas are now being used more frequently. At a refinery, crude oil is separated into different fractions or chemicals. Most of these fractions are used for fuels.

In a further process at the refinery some of the remaining fractions are cracked or separated into various parts, including the gas ethylene, one of the main chemicals from which plastics can be made.

Plastic is a word that originally meant “pliable and easily shaped.” It only recently became a name for a category of materials called polymers. The word polymer means “of many parts,” and polymers are made of long chains of molecules. Polymers abound in nature. Cellulose, the material that makes up the cell walls of plants, is a very common natural polymer.

Over the last century and a half humans have learned how to make synthetic polymers, sometimes using natural substances like cellulose, but more often using the plentiful carbon atoms provided by petroleum and other fossil fuels. Synthetic polymers are made up of long chains of atoms, arranged in repeating units, often much longer than those found in nature. It is the length of these chains, and the patterns in which they are arrayed, that make polymers strong, lightweight, and flexible. In other words, it’s what makes them so plastic.

These properties make synthetic polymers exceptionally useful, and since we learned how to create and manipulate them, polymers have become an essential part of our lives. Plastics have saturated our world and changed the way that we live.

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WHAT IS A PLASTIC?

Plastics are everywhere! You are sitting on a plastic chair, leaning on a plastic-coated table or wearing plastic shoes. There are many different types of plastics. So what makes something a plastic? The first plastics were made more than 100 years ago from cellulose which is naturally found in plants.

Today plastics are made mostly from crude oil, a raw material that is fast running out. In the future, new raw materials must be found to make plastics, and there must be greater recycling of plastic waste.

Plastics is the term commonly used to describe a wide range of synthetic or semi synthetic materials that are used in a huge and growing range of applications. Everywhere you look, you will find plastics. We use plastic products to help make our lives cleaner, easier, safer and more enjoyable. We find plastics in the clothes we wear, the houses we live in, and the cars we travel in. The toys we play with, the televisions we watch, the computers we use and the DVDs we watch all contain plastics.

Plastics are organic materials, just like wood, paper or wool. The raw materials used to produce plastics are natural products such as cellulose, coal, natural gas, and salt. Plastics have become the modern material of choice because they make it possible to balance today’s needs with environmental concerns.

  • The word plastic comes from the Greek Plastikos – meaning able to be shaped.
  • They can be shaped into almost anything.
  • Plastics are light and relatively cheap.
  • They can be produced in different colours.
  • Heat and electricity do not travel through plastics easily; they are good ‘insulators’.
  • Unlike metals and wood, they do not rust or rot.

But plastics do have some disadvantages too.

  • They are made from resources which will eventually run out, and they are difficult to recycle.
  • Because they do not naturally rot (biodegrade) like wood, they are an eyesore and a hazard in the environment.
  • They are not as strong as many metals and they melt at high temperatures, sometimes giving off poisonous fumes.

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What is stubble burning?

The air quality in Delhi and other parts of north India hit a hazardous level this month. Levels of dangerous particles in the air – known as PM2.5 – were over 10 times the safe limits in the capital. The air quality index (AQI) crossed an all-time high of 1,000 in some places on November 3. As per data, the AQI between 0 and 50 is considered safe, 51-100 satisfactory, 101-200 moderate, 201-300 poor. At 301-400 it’ considered very poor and 401-500 falls in the severe category. When the AQI crosses the 500 mark, it falls into the emergency category.

The odd-even rule, a car rationing scheme, came into effect on November 4. (As per rule, cars with odd numbers will be allowed to run on odd days such as Nov 5, 7 etc., and cars with even numbers will be allowed on even days such as Nov 6, 8, etc.). Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal blamed crop burning in Haryana and Punjab for increased pollution levels in the capital during winter.

Air pollution is a year-round problem in Delhi due to vehicular and industrial emission, but the impact is felt more during the winter months. The capital’s low air quality during the winter is attributed to its geography, low wind speed and stubble burning by farmers in the neighbouring States of Punjab and Haryana. These farmers have come under fire for taking the air quality to a dangerous level.

Stubble burning is the practice of removing crop residue from fields post-harvest by setting fire to it. This usually happens during October and November (autumn months), as the farmers begin to prepare the field for sowing winter crops – especially wheat.

As the southwest monsoon retreats, it sets off northwesterly winds, which carry the smoke from the burning of stubble towards Delhi and other northern regions.

According to the agriculture ministry, 23 million tonnes of paddy straw is burnt in Punjab, Haryana and UP every year.

 

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Are there schools that accept plastic as fees?

           Does your school accept plastic as fees? There is a unique school in the outskirts of Guwahati, Assam which does. If a student brings 25 pieces of plastic, it is accepted as fees in Akshar School. The plastic waste that they bring is recycled to make eco-friendly bricks that can be used for construction.

          When Parmita Sarma and Mazin Mukhtar started this school in June 2016, their aim was to provide free education to poor kids. Their plan took a slight twist when they saw the villagers making bonfires of plastic to beat the cold.

           They wanted to educate the villagers about the harmful effects of plastic and hence modified the fee structure from having no fees to plastic waste as fees. A practical lesson in recycling! The school provides socially and environmentally relevant education.

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Which is the first Indian state to ban disposable plastic bags?

           Sikkim, a tiny state in the foothills of the Himalayas is famous not only for its natural beauty and biodiversity, but also for its eco-friendly stands.

           In 1998, Sikkim became the first Indian state to ban disposable plastic bags. They were eliminated from both rural and urban areas and labelled as hazardous. 2016 is an environmentally important year for Sikkim as the state took two landmark decisions. The first was to ban packaged drinking water in government offices and at government events.

           The state has also banned the use of disposable styro-foam and thermocol plates and cutlery.

           It now targets single-use plastic bottles.

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