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This page looks at the
manufacture of epoxyethane from ethene, and then at some of the products that
are made from epoxyethane.
The manufacture of
epoxyethane
Conditions
Problems and hazards
during manufacture
The main problem
comes in controlling the temperature. The reaction is exothermic and so the
temperature will tend to rise unless it is carefully controlled.
At higher temperatures
the ethene burns in the oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water which
means that the temperature would increase even more - and the whole thing get
completely out of hand!
Two hazards
during manufacture come from the nature of epoxyethane. It is
The reactivity of
epoxyethane
Ring strain
The reason that
epoxyethane is so reactive is that bonding pairs in the ring of atoms in the
molecule are forced very close together. The bond angles are about 60° rather
than about 109.5° when carbon atoms normally form single bonds.
The overlap between
the atomic orbitals in forming the carbon-carbon and carbon-oxygen bonds is
less good than it is normally, and there is considerable repulsion between
the bonding pairs. The system becomes more stable if the ring is broken.
When epoxyethane
reacts a carbon-oxygen bond is always broken and the ring opens up.
Uses of epoxyethane
Manufacture of
ethane-1,2-diol (ethylene glycol)
Acid catalysed
hydrolysis of epoxyethane
Epoxyethane reacts
with water in the presence of an acid catalyst (very dilute sulphuric acid)
at a temperature of about 60°C. Ethane-1,2-diol is produced.
A large excess of
water is used to try to prevent the product from reacting with the original
epoxyethane. Ethane-1,2-diol is an alcohol (because it contains simple -OH
groups), and alcohols react with epoxyethane (see below).
Even in the presence
of a large excess of water, this reaction happens as well:
The product is still
an alcohol, and similar reactions can also lead to quite long chains.
Uses of
ethane-1,2-diol
Ethane-1,2-diol is
used as an antifreeze in car engines. It is added to the cooling water to
prevent it from freezing under very cold conditions.
Ethane-1,2-diol is
also used in the manufacture of polyesters such as poly(ethylene
terephthalate). You may have come across this as a fibre used to make clothes
(perhaps under the brand name Terylene), or as a clear material used to make
plastic drinks bottles (PET).
The reaction of
epoxyethane with alcohols
This is a reaction
which students at this level often find difficulty remembering. It is
actually probably easier to work out than remember. Think of it as an
extension of the reaction with water.
Alcohols have the
formula R-OH, where R is an alkyl group. Water can be thought of as H-OH.
The reaction of
epoxyethane with water can be colour-coded like this:
Now do the same thing
with the alcohol:
Product molecules of
this type are used as solvents.
Notice that the
product is still an alcohol. It has an -OH group at the right-hand end of the
molecule. If the epoxyethane is in excess, the reaction can continue. (In
fact, it continues to some extent even if the epoxyethane isn't in excess.)
The product from this
reaction is again an alcohol, and can go on to react with even more
epoxyethane! What you get eventually is a chain with a structure:
Compounds of this type
are used as plasticisers (added, for example, to PVC to make it more
flexible) or as non-ionic surfactants (detergents). To make the surfactant,
you would start with a fairly long chain alcohol to produce a molecule such
as:
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