Petroleum is a MIXTURE of organic compounds, all of which are above their melting point at STP and some of which are near their boiling point at STP.
This means that at STP petroleum is a volatile liquid.
Bromine
NitrogenOxygenFlourineHeliumNeonArgonKryptonXenonRadonChlorineHydrogen
No. It is a liquid and a component of petrol/gasoline.
OCTANE - A rating scale used to grade gasoline as to its antiknock properties. Also any of several isometric liquid paraffin hydrocarbons, C8H18. Normal octane is a colorless liquid found in petroleum boiling at 124.6 degrees Celsius. OCTANE RATING - A measure of a gasoline's resistance to exploding too early in the engine cycle, which causes knocking. The higher the rating, the lower the chance of premature ignition.
No, C8H18 is not an aqueous solution. It is a chemical formula for octane, which is a hydrocarbon compound commonly found in gasoline.
Bromine
Bromine
At SATP, bismuth is a solid
At SATP, bismuth is a solid
A non metal that is a liquid at STP is Mercury, with the symbol of Hg. This chemical element melts at 234.32 K and has atomic number of 80.
SATP- Standard Ambient Temperature and Pressure Temperature: 25 degrees celsius Pressure: 101.32 kPa
Octane is a liquid, not a gas. Its boiling point is considerably higher than that of water.
10,800 kJ (per 2 moles of octane; the balanced chemical equation)
NitrogenOxygenFlourineHeliumNeonArgonKryptonXenonRadonChlorineHydrogen
Octane is a liquid at room temperature (it's one of the main ingredients of petrol/gasoline). If you mean what will it mix with, the answer is any other hydrocarbon liquid such as hexane or heptane or nonane.
6.335 liters.
It stands for Standard Ambient Tempurature and Pressure.