10.4.2

The Haber Process

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The Haber Process

By reacting nitrogen with hydrogen, the Haber process yields ammonia. Nitrogen-based fertilisers can be made from this ammonia. Farmers can then add the fertiliser back into the soil. The steps involved in the Haber process are:

Pass over iron catalyst

Pass over iron catalyst

  • Nitrogen and hydrogen are passed over an iron catalyst at a temperature of 450°C and a pressure of 200 atm. This results in the production of ammonia gas.
  • This reaction is reversible, so not all of the ammonia stays as ammonia - some will break back down to give the reactants, nitrogen and hydrogen.
Condensation

Condensation

  • The ammonia gas cools down in a condenser. The ammonia is removed from the condenser once it has become a liquid.
Recycling

Recycling

  • We can recycle any unused hydrogen and nitrogen back into the process to create more ammonia. This means that waste of valuable reactants can be avoided!
Jump to other topics
1

Atomic Structure

2

Chemical Bonding

3

Quantitative Chemistry

4

Chemical Changes

5

Energy Changes

6

The Rate & Extent of Chemical Change

7

Organic Chemistry

8

Chemical Analysis

9

Chemistry of the Atmosphere

10

Using Resources

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