yea.petoral is separated by process by process
they separete on their own if you let the container sit, the oil rises to the top
simple distlation
Because petrol is a combustible substance. Water is inert.
The correct increasing order of evaporation is: water, alcohol, kerosene, petrol. Water evaporates the fastest due to its low boiling point, followed by alcohol, kerosene, and then petrol, which has the highest boiling point.
When water is mixed with petrol and stirred, the two liquids do not form a homogeneous mixture due to their differing polarities; water is polar while petrol is non-polar. As a result, water and petrol will separate into distinct layers, with water settling at the bottom since it is denser than petrol. Any agitation will temporarily disperse the two, but they will quickly revert to separate layers once the stirring stops.
they separete on their own if you let the container sit, the oil rises to the top
They do.
Yes, water is denser and heavier than petrol. One liter of water weighs about 1 kilogram, while one liter of petrol weighs approximately 0.75 kilograms.
It's not recommended for your vehicle, as it gives less for the engine to burn, as water is not flammable obviously. pour the water in to the petrol, or pour the petrol into the water. Shake, don't stir.
petrol and water
Yes - Oil is lighter than water. Petrol, or gasoline, floats on water because it is lighter that water.
separete
Petrol and water do not mix well as petrol is hydrophobic and repels water. When mixed and stirred, the two liquids will separate into distinct layers with petrol forming the upper layer due to its lower density.
Petrol and water do not mix as they have different densities and chemical properties. The two liquids will separate into distinct layers, with the petrol floating above the water due to its lower density. It is not a safe practice as mixing them can pose a fire hazard.
No
it is a spindle
simple distlation