1 gallon for #1 Kerosene produces 135,000 BTUs.
#1 Kerosene is closely related to #1 Diesel and JP8 (Jet Fuel) - they differ chiefly in additives.
Likewise, #2 Kerosene, Diesel #2, and Furnace Oil are similar to one another. #2 oils have higher sulfur content, which leads to more eye and lung irritation from the emissions. However, they are also comprised of longer hydrocarbon chains, and therefore weigh more per gallon and also have somewhat higher energy content.
jet fuel kerosene is about 126,000 BTU per US gallon
134,000 BTUs per gallon
I am out of oil with a delivery scheduled for tomorrow. I went out to the shed to get a 5 gallon can and found a 5 gallon kerosene can filled. I have no smell therefore can not tell if the clear liquid is kerosene or gasoline. I hate to throw it away if it is kerosene, I could burn it in the heater
Kerosene is a mixtute of chemical compounds, hydrocarbons, that contain from 6 to 16 carbon atoms.s
The equivalent of about 6,330,000,000 joules or 6 million BTUs
Yes. kerosene is miscible in CCl4.
yes
One gallon of kerosene will produce 134,000 BTUs of energy when burned.
Depends on the BTUs of the heater.
About 114,000 BTU per US gallon.
3.785 L in 1 gallon.
114100 Btu
Approximately 5,800,000 BTUs per 42-gallon barrel.
Yes. Kerosene has 140,000 btu's per gallon and gasoline has less.
How many Btus if 1 cubic foot of Liquid Petroleum
$3.50-$4.00 per gallon
Top to bottom vegetable oil, kerosene, antifreeze, water.
100 gallons of kerosene weighs = 660 pounds
Type your answer here... there are around 91,600 BTUs in a gallon of propane. The standard BBQ sized bottle of propane contains 11 pounds of propane. Propane weighs about 4.2 pounds per gallon, so that 11 pounds of propane is about 2.5 gallons in its liquid state. That means there is 91,600 BTUs/Gal times 2.5 gallons so a BBQ sized tank of propane contains about 2.3 million BTUs. If your BBQ has a 50,000 BTU burner, on high heat, it will last a bit over 4 and half hours of run time.