8 to 12 gallons depending on crude type used
it depneds on the barrel of coarse and oviousley u wood get a barrel ful
A standard barrel of oil is 42 US gallons which is a lot of ounces, 1 gallon = 128 ounces
200 ltrs
About 19.6 gallons of gasoline from each barrel of crude oil. According to API: 'Better refining technologies have made it possible to produce over 21 gallons of gasoline from a 42-gallon barrel of crude oil ' also look at the National Petroleum Refiners Association I wish i had my old thinkpad up and running, i know I have a really good graph of all the products that are taken from a '55' gal barrel of oil.. with additaves, it adds up to quite a bit more than the 'barrel' itself..
because crude oil is made out of two differents elements
The principal feedstock is crude oil (petroleum).
To make plastics, crude oil and natural gas are refined into ethane, propane and hundreds of other petrochemical products. The Ethane and propane is then cracked into ethylene and propylene, using high-temperature furnaces. A Catalyst is then combined with ethylene or propylene in a reactor, resulting in fluff, a powdered material (polymer) resembling laundry detergent. Fluff is combined with additives in a continuous blender. Polymer is fed to an extruder where it is melted. Melted plastic is cooled then fed to a pelletize that cuts the product into small pellets which are ready to be shipped to the customers.
nitrogen and sulphur
Many things can be made out of crude oil including synthetic textiles, plastics, fertilizers, bubblegum(!) , car gasoline (car petrol), diesel, jet fuel, heating oil, tar for roads etc.
One barrel of crude oil produces about 19.6 US gallons of gasoline.
One barrel (42 gallons) of crude oil, when refined, yields approximately 19.6 gallons of finished motor gasoline. The remainder of the barrel yields distillate fuel oil, residual fuel oil, jet fuel, and other products.
0! you booger mama!0! you booger mama!
About 19.6 gallons of gasoline from each barrel of crude oil. According to API: 'Better refining technologies have made it possible to produce over 21 gallons of gasoline from a 42-gallon barrel of crude oil ' also look at the National Petroleum Refiners Association I wish i had my old thinkpad up and running, i know I have a really good graph of all the products that are taken from a '55' gal barrel of oil.. with additaves, it adds up to quite a bit more than the 'barrel' itself..
OIL-MAKESProductGallons per barrelgasoline19.5distillate fuel oil(Includes both home heating oil and diesel fuel)9.2kerosene-type jet fuel4.1residual fuel oil(Heavy oils used as fuels in industry, marine transportation and for electric power generation)2.3liquefied refinery gasses1.9still gas1.9coke1.8asphalt and road oil1.3petrochemical feedstocks1.2lubricants0.5kerosene0.2other0.3Figures are based on 1995 average yields for U.S. refineries. One barrel contains 42 gallons of crude oil. The total volume of products made is 2.2 gallons greater than the original 42 gallons of crude oil. This represents "processing gain."... JR
It varies alot. The minimum value is zero- as some crude oil are refined into other products. So, let's assume this is a crude that is economical to refine into gasoline. In this case , it can be as low as 2 gallons or as high as 23 gallons. (1 bbl = 42 gallons) Expressed as a percentage of the crude oil, this is 5 to 55%. (See attached links). The crude oil not refined as gasoline will be refined for other products. Common refined products from crude oil are provided in the related link, and will differ depending on the properties of the crude oil. It's very interesting that after refining, there will be more gallons of produced products than the original barrel of crude oil.
5 gallons
1245 dollars
Only about 15% of the crude oil is made into jp54 but the rest of it usually is made into other things such different types of plastics and such
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 useable petroleum products. Crude oil is measured in barrels (abbreviated "bbls"). A 42-U.S. gallon barrel of crude oil provides slightly more than 44 gallons of petroleum products. This gain from processing the crude oil is similar to what happens to popcorn, it gets bigger after it is popped.
I think about ten