It is a gas at 25 degrees Celsius at standard atmosphere (a specific pressure).
History
Since 1795, ethylene was called an olefiant gas, or oil making gas. This was because it came together with chlorine to make the oil of the Dutch chemists.
In 1866, the GermanchemistAugust Wilhelm von Hofmann came up with a system for naming hydrocarbons. The suffixes -ane, -ene, -ine, -one, and -une were used to call the hydrocarbons with 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 fewer hydrogen atoms than the alkane it came from.[3] Because of this system, ethylene became ethene.
In 1979, the IUPAC decided that ethylene would stay ethylene.
How it is made
Ethylene is made in the chemical industry by steam cracking. Some of the parts of an ethylene plant can be: