Coal & Petroleum
Coal and Petroleum
What you'll learn
- What are fossil fuels and how they formed.
- Coal: types, products and uses.
- Petroleum: extraction, refining and products.
- Natural gas and its uses.
- Why we must conserve fossil fuels.
Key concepts
What are fossil fuels?
- Fossil fuels: coal, petroleum and natural gas — formed from the remains of dead plants and animals over millions of years under high pressure and temperature.
- They are non-renewable — once used, cannot be replaced on human timescales (take millions of years to form).
- Inexhaustible natural resources: sunlight, wind, water — will not run out.
- Exhaustible natural resources: coal, petroleum, natural gas — will eventually run out.
Coal
Formation (coalification):
- Dead plants and trees fell into swamps hundreds of millions of years ago.
- Covered by layers of earth and rock — buried.
- Over millions of years, heat and pressure converted plant matter into coal.
- This process is called carbonisation (slow process — more carbon over time).
Types of coal (in order of carbon content and quality):
| Type | Carbon % | Properties | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peat | ~55% | Partially formed; soft, high moisture | Earliest stage; fuel in some regions |
| Lignite (brown coal) | ~60–70% | Soft; high moisture content | Power generation |
| Bituminous coal | ~70–85% | Most common; moderate quality | Power stations, making coke |
| Anthracite | ~90–95% | Hardest; least moisture; best quality | Domestic heating, steelmaking |
Products from coal:
- Coke: coal heated without air (destructive distillation) → coke (mainly carbon).
- Used in metallurgy (making steel/iron in blast furnaces).
- Coal tar: thick, black liquid obtained when coal is heated without air.
- Source of many useful chemicals: dyes, medicines, explosives, paints, perfumes, plastics.
- Used to surface roads.
- Coal gas: flammable gas obtained from coal; used as fuel in older times.
- Ammoniacal liquor: used as fertiliser.
Petroleum
Formation:
- Tiny marine organisms (algae, zooplankton) died and settled on the sea floor.
- Covered by layers of sand and rock → buried.
- Over millions of years, heat and pressure → petroleum (crude oil) and natural gas.
- Oil and gas trapped in porous rock formations capped by non-porous rock.
Extraction:
- Drilled from underground or under the sea using oil rigs/drilling platforms.
- Crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons (compounds of hydrogen and carbon).
Petroleum refining — Fractional distillation:
- Crude oil is heated in a distillation tower → different fractions collected at different heights (different boiling points).
| Fraction | Boiling point | Uses |
|---|---|---|
| Petroleum gas (LPG) | Below 40°C | Cooking fuel (domestic gas cylinders) |
| Gasoline (petrol) | 40–75°C | Fuel for cars and motorcycles |
| Kerosene | 150–275°C | Jet fuel, household cooking in some areas |
| Diesel | 200–350°C | Fuel for trucks, buses, trains |
| Lubricating oil | 300–350°C | Lubricant for engines, machines |
| Fuel oil / heavy oil | Above 350°C | Ships, industrial furnaces |
| Bitumen (asphalt) | Residue | Road surfacing; waterproofing |
CNG (Compressed Natural Gas):
- Natural gas: mainly methane (CH₄); found above crude oil deposits.
- Compressed → CNG (Compressed Natural Gas).
- Cleaner fuel than petrol/diesel; used in buses, auto-rickshaws, domestic cooking (piped PNG).
- LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas): propane + butane; stored in cylinders under pressure; household cooking.
Why conserve fossil fuels?
- Non-renewable — will run out in the future (crude oil estimated to last ~50 years at current use; coal ~100–200 years).
- Pollution: burning produces CO₂ (greenhouse gas → climate change), SO₂ and NOₓ (acid rain), particulate matter (smog).
- Oil spills: catastrophic for marine ecosystems.
Conservation measures:
- Use renewable energy (solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal).
- Energy efficiency: LED bulbs, efficient engines, better insulation.
- Public transport and carpooling reduce vehicle fuel use.
- Electric vehicles (EVs): shift away from petrol/diesel.
- Reduce, Reuse, Recycle — less energy needed for new products.
Quick check
- What are fossil fuels? Why are they called non-renewable?
- How is coal formed? Name the four types in order of carbon content.
- What is coke? How is it obtained? What is it used for?
- List three useful products obtained from petroleum refining and their uses.
- Why must we conserve fossil fuels? Name two conservation measures.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Coal and Petroleum.
4 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available
1. Fossil Fuels
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2. Products
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3. Conservation
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4. Icse Refining
Coal & Petroleum — Icse Refining
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