Chemistry, asked by yashjamnik14, 10 months ago

describe chemical structure of crude natural rubber​

Answers

Answered by AnnNina03
1

Answer:

Hope this helps.

Please mark it as brainliest

Attachments:
Answered by rohitpansare81
0

Answer:

natural rubber

Natural Rubber Structure

The characterization of polymer materials is more complex than the characterization of simple organic molecules. It has become the norm to separate macrostructure from microstructure when discussing polymer structures. Macrostructure includes the average molecular weight and molecular weight distribution of the individual polymer molecules. Microstructure refers to the way individual monomer units are distributed along the chain and the geometry in which they are distributed.

crude Crude oil, liquid petroleum that is found accumulated in various porous rock formations in Earth’s crust and is extracted for burning as fuel or for processing into

…the liquid form, commonly called crude oil, but, as a technical term, petroleum also includes natural…

Crude oil is a mixture of comparatively volatile liquid hydrocarbons (compounds composed mainly of hydrogen and carbon), though it also contains some nitrogen, sulfur, and oxygen. Those elements form a large variety of complex molecular structures, some of which cannot be readily identified. Regardless of variations, however, almost all crude oil ranges from 82 to 87 percent carbon by weight and 12 to 15 percent hydrogen by weight.

Crude oils are customarily characterized by the type of hydrocarbon compound that is most prevalent in them: paraffins, naphthenes, and aromatics. Paraffins are the most common hydrocarbons in crude oil; certain liquid paraffins are the major constituents of gasoline (petrol) and are therefore highly valued. Naphthenes are an important part of all liquid refinery products, but they also form some of the heavy asphaltlike residues of refinery processes. Aromatics generally constituteonly a small percentage of most crudes. The most common aromatic in crude oil is benzene, a popular building block in

Because crude oil is a mixture of such widely varying constituents and proportions, its physical properties also vary widely. In appearance, for instance, it ranges from colourless to black. Possibly the most important physical property is specific gravity (i.e., the ratio of the weight of equal volumes of a crude oil and pure water at standard conditions). In laboratory measurement of specific gravity, it is customary to assign pure water a measurement of 1; substances lighter than water, such as crude oil, would receive measurements less than 1. The petroleum industry, however, uses the American Petroleum Institute (API) gravity scale, in which pure water has been arbitrarily assigned an API gravity of 10°. Liquids lighter than water, such as oil, have API gravities numerically greater than 10. On the basis of their API gravity, crude oils can be classified as heavy, medium, and light as follows:

Crude oil also is categorized as “sweet” or “sour” depending on the level of sulfur, which occurs either as elemental sulfur or in compounds such as hydrogen sulfide. Sweet crudes have sulfur contents of 0.5 percent or less by weight, and sour crudes have sulfur contents of 1 percent or more by weight. Generally, the heavier the crude oil, the greater its sulfur content. Excess sulfur is removed from crude oil during refining, because sulfur oxides released into the atmosphere during combustion of oil are a major pollutant.

In the United States, the conventional practice for the petroleum industry is to measure capacity by volume and to use the English system of measurement. For this reason, crude oil in the United States is measured in barrels, each barrel containing 42 gallons of oil. Most other areas of the world define capacity by the weight of materials processed and record measurements in metric units; therefore, crude oil outside the United States is usually measured in metric tons. A barrel of API 30° light oil would weigh about 139 kg (306 pounds). Conversely, a metric ton of API 30° light oil would be equal to approximately 252 imperial gallons, or about 7.2 U.S. de oil generally rises with increasing yields

plz mark me brainlist

Similar questions