Because Obama is a nagger.
To separate crude oil through the process called fractional distillation is the purest way to do it, it is also faster and less labour.
The chemical constituents of crude oil all have different boiling points, which allows them to be separated by means of fractional distillation.
By using the boiling point of each substance to separate it out
Fractional distillation is used to turn crude oil into petroleum, and then the products of that (petroleum is one of them) can be broken down into another more flowing substance using a process called cracking, normally done with aliminium oxide as a catalyst
It is possible!! However, using a 'Separating Funnel' is much cheaper and easier.
To separate crude oil through the process called fractional distillation is the purest way to do it, it is also faster and less labour.
No, crude oil is a mixture of many components that can be separated using distillation. Filtration only removes small amounts of impurities based on particle size, but does not actually separate.
The chemical constituents of crude oil all have different boiling points, which allows them to be separated by means of fractional distillation.
By using distillation.
Petrol comes from crude oil. When dead organisms are subjected to extremely high pressures for millions of years, the organic compounds in the organisms will transform into hydrocarbons that are present in crude oil. This crude oil is then distilled using fractional distillation to separate different components, such as petrol.
using distillation
Using distillation
By using the boiling point of each substance to separate it out
Fractional distillation is used to turn crude oil into petroleum, and then the products of that (petroleum is one of them) can be broken down into another more flowing substance using a process called cracking, normally done with aliminium oxide as a catalyst
It is possible!! However, using a 'Separating Funnel' is much cheaper and easier.
Crude oils are extracted by fractioning crude oil in a fractioning tower. They are fractioned by heating to boiling point and rising up the tower where they condensate and come out in another form.
The problem with distillation is how to turn all of the hot vapour back into liquid. A simple distillation experiment using just a glass tube as a condenser, rather than a Liebig one, loses most of the steam.