First thing to do would be to contact the state Geological Survey and see if they have any information concerning oil and natural gas resources in your area.
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There is no 'solvent' in pure natural gas. Pure natural gas is methane (colorless and odorless). The natural gas used in stoves has methylmercaptan mixed with the methane to give the gas an odor to help detect leaks. In this case the methane is the solvent and methylmecaptan is the solute.
Natural gas has a stale petroleum/hydrocarbon smell. Before it is delivered to your home, natural gas has Mercaptan added which gives the gas a sulphur or "rotten egg" smell to help detect leaks.Other ways to detect a natural gas leak is by Sight or Sound:Natural gas is colorless, but vapor and "ground frosting" may be visible at high pressures. A gas leak may also be indicated by bubbles in wet areas.A hissing or roaring noise along the right-of-way of a pipe/line could also indicate a natural gas leak. .
Yes, natural gasses can kill you. Natural gasses can be very dangerous as many are hard to detect since they have no smell.
The compressibility of gases is utilized.
1. Pure natural gas (CH) doesn't smell. 2. Smell is a chemical property of substances because is caused by specific molecules.
The smell in gas is man-made, natural gas is odourless. It is added during the gas manufacturing/refining process so as to be able to detect it (i.e. smell). The chemical is Mercaptan
First Alert plug in combination explosive gas/carbon monoxide alarm with battery backup is a great way to detect leaks in your home. It can also detect propane gas, methane gas, and natural gas.
You can't convert natural gas to propane because natural gas is methane and propane is what it says it is. Given that, there are Compressed Natural Gas cars, and if you get a natural gas compressor you can use it in a car.
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