yes, very easily Liquid petrol doesn't actually burn. It vapourises before it ignites.
sand buckets are kept ready at petrol pump so that if there is fire by chance so the sand can be thrown over it to cut it contact from air so that the fire cannot extend
Yes, of course.
Ethanol
No sand is not flammable. This is easier to consider if we think of occasions where sand is thrown onto a fire to put it out.STUPID ANSWER
the bad conductors of petrol is sand.
yes, very easily Liquid petrol doesn't actually burn. It vapourises before it ignites.
The motorbike can only burn so much petrol at a time. To burn petrol it needs to be sprayed as a mist inside the combustion chamber. If you flood the engine it can't burn the petrol so it stalls.
Magnets would remove the iron. sugar is water soluble now you have sulfur and sand mixed. Apply heat sulfur will burn before the sand.
Petrol changes color when mixed with iodine solution due to covalent bonding.
yes.
No, you cannot convert a petrol to burn diesel.
Petrol is a volatile liquid. The vapours mixed with oxygen are highly combustible.
yes it can, mixed with petrol. 5litres diesel to .5l of petrol. mixed it up and ur good to go.
Sand doesn't burn at all, so, yes.
It burns quicker because when it is sprayed, the oxygen particles (0) completely overwhelm and surround the petrol particles. Oxygen is a compulsory supply in order to make something burn. And the reason for why petrol does not burn quickly when it is in a bowl is because the Oxygen particles only surround the surface of the petrol rather than surrounding the whole thing like when it is sprayed. ()-> a circle -> oxygen particles collide from all sides of the droplets sprayed-> burns quicker |_|-> petrol in a bowl-> oxygen particles can only collide into the surface of the petrol-> consumes more time to burn the petrol.
As well as petrol you need oxygen and an ignition source