fractional distillation
Fractional distillation is used to separate the components of petroleum. Petrol (gasoline) evaporates at a lower temperature than kerosene evaporates at.
You can separate kerosene from petrol using a process called fractional distillation. This involves heating the mixture to a high temperature, causing the components to vaporize at different points based on their boiling points. The vapors can then be collected and condensed back into liquids, resulting in separate kerosene and petrol fractions.
Petrol is more flammable than kerosene because petrol has a lower flash point and autoignition temperature. This means petrol is more likely to ignite at lower temperatures compared to kerosene.
If we dissolve kerosene in petrol running vehicle the petrol filtrer in the car will be damaged and also the pump.
Kerosene oil and petrol can be separated by a process called fractional distillation. This involves heating the mixture to a specific temperature where each component evaporates and then condensing the vapors back into liquid form, allowing for their separation based on their different boiling points.
Fractional distillation ( i think)
Petrol is more dense than kerosene. Density is a measure of mass per unit volume, and petrol is more dense because it has a higher mass per unit volume compared to kerosene.
The mixture can be separated using fractional distillation, as petrol and kerosene have different boiling points (petrol has a lower boiling point than kerosene). By heating the mixture, the components will vaporize at different temperatures and can be collected separately as they condense back into liquids.
Fule (oil disile ) 250-350
No! Yes! Low performance spark ignition engines in boats and tractors commonly use kerosene as a fuel. Some need to be started on petrol then switched to kerosene.
Kerosene can be separated from crude oil through a process called fractional distillation. In this process, crude oil is heated to separate its components based on their boiling points. Kerosene, with a boiling point between 150-275°C, can be collected as a separate fraction during the distillation process.
The correct increasing order of evaporation is: water, alcohol, kerosene, petrol. Water evaporates the fastest due to its low boiling point, followed by alcohol, kerosene, and then petrol, which has the highest boiling point.