Calor gas, petrol, naptha, paraffin, diesel, fuel oil, lubricating oil and bitumen all come out of a fractionating column
some are good and some are bad
Coal is composed of mostly complex hydrocarbons and about 10 % other constituents. Primarily, carbon, roughly 80%, moisture, hydrogen (hydrocarbons), nitrogen, sulfur compounds (about 1-2%), and ash (minerals and metals). Coal is combusted (burned or rapidly oxidized in the presence of heat and excess air), to generate steam used to operate engines, and other equipment and machines, most of which generate electricity.
True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
Products made form petroleum are called hydrocarbons. Petroleum and natural gas are where most hydrocarbons come from. Hydrocarbons are entirely made from crude oils.
I am pretty sure the answer is hydrocarbons.
0%- Humans exhale CO2. Human expell methane.
Hydrocarbons are used as fuels, solvents feedstock in organic chemistry.
No, but foods can contain some hydrocarbons. While most hydrocarbons are toxic to humans, one form in particular is used in many food preparations: paraffin wax.
Phenol is toxic and corrosive.
some are good and some are bad
Simply Stated: Hydrocarbons are used as fuels.
Yes, you probably could.
Red
Hydrocarbons are used for making natural materials.
Hydrocarbons are used for making natural materials.
It is used in a petroleum refinery to separate out the different hydrocarbons.
They are not hydrocarbons.