3TV - Chapter 4 - Section 4.1 - Combustion

§4.1 Combustion
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§4.1 Combustion

Slide 1 - Diapositive

What is needed for combustion?

Slide 2 - Carte mentale

Ignition temperature!
OXYGEN

Slide 3 - Diapositive

Complete 
combustion

Slide 4 - Diapositive

Types of combustion
With a combustion you can get different types of reaction products, dependent on the amounts of oxygen and the combustable material itself.

When there is enough oxygen you are going to get a complete combustion.


Slide 5 - Diapositive

Complete combustion of methane

Slide 6 - Diapositive

Combustion products (oxides)
Element
Symbol
Name of oxide
Formula
Carbon
C
Carbondioxide
Hydrogen
H
Water
Sulphur
S
sulphurdioxide
CO2
H2O
SO2

Slide 7 - Diapositive

What are the three requirements for combustion?
A
Oxygen, gasoline and heat
B
Air, wood, lighter
C
Oxygen, fuel, temperature
D
Air, fuel, temperature

Slide 8 - Quiz

Combustion always forms:
A
Atoms
B
Fire
C
Oxides
D
Water

Slide 9 - Quiz

The combustion products of complete combustion of H2 are:
A
H2O
B
HO
C
HO2
D
CO2

Slide 10 - Quiz


The combustion products of complete combustion of  C2H5S are:
A
C, H, S
B
CO2, H2O, SO2
C
CO2, H2O
D
CO2, H2O, S

Slide 11 - Quiz

Combustion product in a complete combustion always contain the atom:

A
C
B
H
C
O
D
S

Slide 12 - Quiz

Incomplete 
combustion

Slide 13 - Diapositive

Incomplete combustion

Slide 14 - Diapositive

Reaction equations 
incomplete combustion
complete combustion

Slide 15 - Diapositive

Types of combustion
With a combustion you can get different types of reaction products, dependent on the amounts of oxygen and the combustable material itself.

When there is enough oxygen you are going to get a complete combustion.

When there is a low / insufficient amount of oxygen you are going to get a partial or incomplete combustion and you will get different reaction products

Slide 16 - Diapositive

Incomplete combustion 
of compound with 
C and H atoms
  • Insufficient oxygen
  • Yellow flame

  •       and             ( bit of            ) 
Complete combustion 
of compound with 
C and H atoms
  • Enough oxygen
  • Blue flame
  •  


H2O
H2O
CO2
CO2
CO
C

Slide 17 - Diapositive

Slide 18 - Vidéo

Slide 19 - Diapositive

Slide 20 - Diapositive

How to extinguishing a fire
You now know which three factors are necessary the get a fire started.
If you want to extinguish a fire, you must remove one (or more) of these factors.
For each situation, you can examine which factor is easiest to remove and therefor determine which extinguishing method can be used.
For example, in the event of a fire caused by a gas leak, it is wise to first close the gas tap (remove fuel).

Slide 21 - Diapositive

Slide 22 - Diapositive

Slide 23 - Vidéo

Slide 24 - Vidéo

Slide 25 - Vidéo

Look at the sentences below about extinguishing a fire.
Drag the sentences to the side of the triangle that you have to remove.
Close the gas tap.
Extinguish a paper fire with water
Wrapping someone in a fire blanket.
Blow out a lighter.
Place the lid on the deep fryer.
Extinguish a gasoline fire with foam

Slide 26 - Question de remorquage

A reagent is a substance that reacts in a characteristic, observable manner (sound or color) with the substance you want to demonstrate.

A reagent needs two meet two requirements:
Selective: the reagent only reacts to one (or little) substance(s)
Sensitive: little amount is required of both the reagent as 
                    the substance to be detected. 
There are some reagents you need to know about.


Reagent (plural: reagents)

Slide 27 - Diapositive

Copy this scheme in your chemistry notes 

show
reagent/method
Observation
water
limewater
sulfur dioxide
glowing splint
flame
you hear a characteristic 'pop'
You must complete this table with the help of the following slides.

Slide 28 - Diapositive

Demo - Reagents
Reagent for water
Reagent for carbondioxide

Slide 29 - Diapositive

Watch the above (Dutch) videos to complete your table further. Good luck.

Slide 30 - Diapositive

Practise makes perfect.
Your table should be completely filled in.
Answer the following questions to see if your knowledge about reagents is complete enough. 
Improve your schedule if necessary.

Slide 31 - Diapositive

White copper sulphate is a ... to demonstrate the presence of ... .
A
reagent, carbon dioxide
B
reagent, hydrogen
C
reagent, water
D
reagent, oxygen

Slide 32 - Quiz

A reagent that detects only one or very few different substances is called ....
A
sensitive
B
sensible
C
selective
D
obvious

Slide 33 - Quiz

Which statements are true?
1) A reagent must be sensitive and therefore must react
with a little bit of the substance
2) A reagent must be selective and therefore it must only react
with itself
A
A and B are true
B
A is true, B is not true
C
A is not true, B is true
D
A and B are not true

Slide 34 - Quiz

The presence of oxygen can be shown by:
A
collect the gas in a test tube and hold the opening near a flame you hear a 'pop'
B
collect the gas in a test tube and hold a glowing splint in the test tube, the splint will glow brighter

Slide 35 - Quiz

The 'pop' that you hear is evidence of the presence of
A
carbon dioxide
B
hydrogen
C
oxygen
D
water

Slide 36 - Quiz


The flask contains lime water. A second substance is sucked through the lime water. Which substance can you detect with lime water?
A
Water
B
Carbon dioxide
C
Oxygen
D
None of the three options

Slide 37 - Quiz

You can show the presence of carbon dioxide with lime water. What happens to the limewater when it reacts with carbon dioxide?
A
It's going to solidify
B
It becomes yellow and cloudy
C
It becomes a clear liquid
D
It becomes cloudy white

Slide 38 - Quiz

What is the reagent of SO2?
A
iodine solution
B
white copper sulphate
C
lime water
D
starch

Slide 39 - Quiz

Which reagent is used to demonstrate:
oxygen
carbon dioxide
water
hydrogen
sulfur dioxide
clear lime water
white copper sulphate 
glowing splint
flame
iodine solution

Slide 40 - Question de remorquage

What observation do you do when demonstrating:
oxygen
carbon dioxide
water
hydrogen
sulfur dioxide
clear colorless liquid turns white cloudy
white solid becomes a blue solid
will glow brighter
flame
clear yellow liquid becomes clear colorless liquid

Slide 41 - Question de remorquage

Overview of                                              
Reagents:            * Carbondioxide


                * Water


                                * Sulfurdioxide


                  * Starch
colourless Limewater
(becomes turbid)

White copper(II) sulfate
(white becomes blue)
Custard (white becomes yellow)

Iodine solution (brownyellow, becomes colourless)

Iodine solution
(brownyellow, becomes purple)

Slide 42 - Diapositive

What is incomplete combustion?
A combustion with ........
oxygen
A
too much
B
insufficient
C
no
D
enough

Slide 43 - Quiz

What color becomes a flame with incomplete combustion?
A
yellow
B
blue

Slide 44 - Quiz

Has there been complete combustion?
A
yes
B
no

Slide 45 - Quiz

What type of reaction is this?
2C8H18+25O2>16CO2+18H2O
A
Seperation
B
Complete combustion
C
Decomposition reaction
D
Incomplete combustion

Slide 46 - Quiz

Ethanol + oxygen --> carbondioxide + carbon + water

This reaction is ...
A
Complete combustion
B
Incomplete combustion
C
No combustion

Slide 47 - Quiz