Octane is a hydrocarbon.
Octane is neither an acid nor a base; it is a hydrocarbon with the chemical formula C8H18, primarily used as a fuel. It is classified as an alkane, which means it is non-polar and does not participate in acid-base reactions. In general, octane is neutral and does not exhibit acidic or basic properties in aqueous solutions.
Octane is neither an acid or base. So it will produce a pH of 7. A not on pH: no acid or base has a specific pH. pH is a measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution of water. That depends on both how strong an acid or base is and how much is dissolved in a solution in a given volume of water.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is not soluble in octane (C8H18). Sodium chloride is only soluble in water (H2O), methanol (CH4O), formic acid (CH2O2), formamide (CH3NO), glycerol(C3H8O3), propelyne glycol (C3H8O2), and ammonia (NH3).
It is used in lead-acid car batteries and used to be added to gasoline, to improve combustion (octane level).
absolutely....you can mix any octane with any other octane
NOS octane booster
There is no octane in gasoline... it is the equivalent of octane.
It has no octane rating.
Octane has not special application excepting the so-called octane number.
The molecular formula of octane is C8H18. It doesn't really have a "symbol."The "octane" in gasoline is actually "iso-octane" or 2,2,4-trimethylpentane. It has the same molecular formula, but the atoms are arranged differently than in n-octane.
65% of 87 and 35% 93 to make 89 octane gas
octane No, it's not. Octane is C8H18