fractional distillation.
An oil refinery
Crude oil is separated in an oil refinery which makes a bunch of different byproducts such as airplane gas, kerosene, and alot more. -cooleye101
Crude oil is separated into different chemical compounds through a process called fractional distillation. This process involves heating the crude oil to high temperatures, then cooling it in a fractionating column. The different compounds in crude oil have different boiling points, allowing them to be separated based on their molecular size and weight.
Ditillation at different temperatures
At refineries.
A fraction in crude oil refers to a component that is separated from the whole crude oil through a process known as fractional distillation. Crude oil is made up of different hydrocarbons with varying boiling points, and when heated, these components can be separated into fractions such as gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel based on their boiling points.
Crude oil is separated into different fractions by a process called fractional distillation. This process takes advantage of the differences in boiling points of the components in crude oil to separate them into various products such as gasoline, diesel, and asphalt.
That would be a "refinery".
Separation by fractional destillation.
Crude oil is separated by fractional distillation in an oil refinery.
After crude oil is removed from the ground, it is sent to a refinery by pipeline, ship, or barge. At a refinery, different parts of the crude oil are separated into usable petroleum products.
Crude oil is separated into different substances with similar boiling points. The substances in crude oil can be separated using fractional distillation. The crude oil is evaporated and its vapours are allowed to condense at different temperatures in the fractionating column. Each fraction contains hydrocarbon molecules with a similar number of carbon atoms