Octane has the chemical formula - C8H18. It is a hydro-carbon.
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.
Gasoline is a compound. It is a hydrocarbon.
No, octane is not a base. Octane is a hydrocarbon compound, specifically an alkane. It is commonly found in gasoline and used as a fuel.
Octane + oxygen ---> carbon dioxide + water Lulu
octane + oxygen --> water + carbon dioxide
Octane is a compound. octane + O2 = CO2 + H2O + Energy, You can tell by the inputs and outputs. Octane and Oxygen inputs and Carbon dioxide and water outputs, means Octane must consist of hydrogen H and carbon C, thus a compound not an element.
He found lead to increase octane leaves in gasoline
What most people mean when they talk about "octane" is slightly different from what a chemist means by the word (a layman's "octane" is a chemist's "isooctane", or 2,2,4-trimethylpentane). However, both octane and 2,2,4-trimethylpentane are hydrocarbons, meaning they contain exactly two elements: hydrogen and carbon.
absolutely....you can mix any octane with any other octane
There is no octane in gasoline... it is the equivalent of octane.
NOS octane booster
It has no octane rating.
Octane is a hydrocarbon.
Octane has not special application excepting the so-called octane number.
65% of 87 and 35% 93 to make 89 octane gas
Water and gasoline form a heterogeneous mixture
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.