bitumen, fuel oil, lubricating oil, diesel, kerosene, naphtha, petrol, refinery gas
A thick, flammable, mixture of hydrocarbons that occurs naturally beneath the earth's surface. It can be separated into natural gas, gasoline, naphtha, kerosene, fuel oil, lubricating oils, paraffin wax, and asphalt. Plus petroleum jelly.
By fractional distillation.
Petrol
gas
The lightest substituent (lowest boiling point) is taken off first. Petroleum gas, followed by naphtha. I do not know what you mean by nitrogen
yah ofcourse...........!! den frm which process will naphtha be made rather than crude oil..!! u stupid!!
Naphtha may be a solvent used in oil-based paint, but it will not function by itself as paint. Because of the environmental impact of the release of volatile organic compounds into the air, the use in paint of solvents such as naphtha is discouraged, and is regulated in some jurisdictions.
Crude oil is separated in an oil refinery which makes a bunch of different byproducts such as airplane gas, kerosene, and alot more. -cooleye101
Using Naphtha in gas power plants has many advantages. Among the most prominent advantages include the ability to use the Naphtha for longer periods of operating time and it costs less.
It´s not only for oil and gas industry of South Africa, NHDT means "Naphtha HyDroTreater (NHDT) which is a process in refineries. Please check with another sources to confirm.
fractional distillation