No . it is a mixture of hydrocarbons.
Yes. And it's not a consistent one. Which hydrocarbons are called "diesel" depends on the raw source of the petroleum it is distilled from.
No! Diesel is a product of hydrocarbons, which deposits are limited and therefore not renewable energy source.
Petrol composition ranges from C5-C12 while that of Diesel average composition is C12H23, ranging from approx. C10H20 to C15H28. So it shows that Diesel consists of heaveir hydrocarbons than Petrol.
diesel is a hydrocarbon!
A biodiesel is any variety of fuel for diesel engines made from renewable organic raw materials as opposed to fossil hydrocarbons.
Yeah they are!
Petroleum-derived diesel is composed of about 75% saturated hydrocarbons (primarily paraffins including n, iso, and cycloparaffins), and 25% aromatic hydrocarbons (including naphthalenes and alkylbenzenes).[24] The average chemical formula for common diesel fuel is C12H23, ranging approximately from C10H20 to C15H28
Yes. it is covalent compound (hydrocarbons)
Calor gas, petrol, naptha, paraffin, diesel, fuel oil, lubricating oil and bitumen all come out of a fractionating column
Diesel and petrol (gasoline) are flammable fossil fuels containing hydrocarbons that we get when plants and animals get buried in the soil and decay over many years. It eventually forms crude oil which is refined into petrol or diesel.
technichally it is a cetane like diesel fuel and with transmission fluid at 32:1 32 ounces kero to ounce transmission fluid you may be able to use it in a diesel engine.
I am pretty sure the answer is hydrocarbons.