petrol is the liquid gasoline
Petrol is a liquid.
The word "fume" generally implies a gas. The only common exception I know of is in the two word phrase "silica fume", which is sometimes used for very fine solid silica particles that have been prepared by a process including a step of passing silica through a fume stage. Such solid material is preferably called "fumed silica".
No. It is a liquid and a component of petrol/gasoline.
commenly oil is called liquid but some times petrol is also called liquid gold :v
Yes - all liquids can with the exception of Liquid Helium.
yes, very easily Liquid petrol doesn't actually burn. It vapourises before it ignites.
There are no types of gas present in petrol because it is basically a liquid that is used in cars and vehicles. Petrol is the UK term for gasoline.
Petrol is a volatile liquid. The vapours mixed with oxygen are highly combustible.
Petrol, or gasoline, at standard temperature and pressure is a liquid.
Petrol (gas in USA), diesel, methylated spirits, liquid gas, are some examples.
Gasoline, or petrol, is a liquid. Otherwise, gas is its own phase, gaseous.
The word "fume" generally implies a gas. The only common exception I know of is in the two word phrase "silica fume", which is sometimes used for very fine solid silica particles that have been prepared by a process including a step of passing silica through a fume stage. Such solid material is preferably called "fumed silica".
Zero there are no gasses cause its a liquid its just called gas because we can
Petrol is what is usually meant by 'gas' in the U.S. It's not a gas when it's in the tank, it's a volatile liquid,but it becomes a gas in the cylinders.
petrol is gas : )
It may be (Butane is a gas, Naphtha is a liquid), but alcohol is also used.
LPG cars are liquid petroleum gas cars that can run on normal petrol or LPG
Yes. Americans will often refer to the liquid fuel gasoline as "gas" for short, which might be confusing to residents of other countries. It is often known outside the U.S. as "petrol."