It is very difficult to determine the exact boiling point for any petroleum product , as all products are a mixture of components . rather than going for boiling point we can determine T5 & T95 & end point for the petrol sample can be determined for our applications or operations.
also flash point , reid vapor pressure can be very useful
T5 sometimes also known as IBP of the mixture (initial boiling point)
T95 the temp where 95% of distillate is collected from a known amount of sample after distillation.
The boiling point in the US customary system is 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
follow what God tellls us Answer: Love God. Love your Neighbour.
Boiling point: 100 0C Freezing point: 0 0C (and 0,01 0C based on the triple point of water)
physiological answers tell us that In neurology water may be boiling at a lower substantial rate then non water water.
Petrol or gasoline is made from the lighter parts of crude oil, and is simply more volatile than kerosene or diesel, because the molecules are smaller. In some countries including the US, the grade of gas is varied winter to summer, to make it volatile enough in cold weather and not too volatile in hot.
Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
Petrol is used by us in Motor Car and Generators.
Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. Now since it has mass and volume it has a density. The density again can lead to various states and these states lets us know the freezing and boiling points of matter. Thus density, boiling point and freezing point are the boiling point of matter.
Chemicals have boiling points, bonds do not. But let us say, you are asking what the boiling point is of a chemical that has an ionic bond. Again, not all ionic type chemicals (which are generally called salts) have the same boiling point. I can, however, tell you that the boiling point of a salt tends to be very high, in the thousands of degrees.
So that in the future, petrol will be there for us to use.
1 liter = 0.264172051 US gallons
"Petrol" is what the British (and Australians, Irish and New Zealanders) call gasoline. Petrol is actually a contraction of the word petroleum which is the feedstock. So there's no difference between petrol and gasoline. Gasoline, kerosene, and diesel fuel are different "fractions" of petroleum distillate. Gasoline is the lowest-boiling/most volatile of the three, kerosene is intermediate, and diesel is the highest-boiling/least volatile. Jet fuel is actually Jet Kerosene. The Britsih usually call kerosene "paraffin". In the US, paraffin is an even higher fraction of petroleum distillate that is solid at room temperature and is generally referred to as "wax".