Yes. CARB (California Air Resource Board) is the reason there's ethanol in gasoline in the first place. When it comes to cleaner burning fuels at the expense of fuel efficiency and engine service life, California has led the way on that.
The IUPAC name of Vinyl Alcohol is ethenol.
Ethanol (not ethenol) is ethyl alcohol, which is the alcohol in alcoholic drinks. It can also be used as a fuel. See link below
Gasoline - 2014 was released on: USA: 15 May 2014 (Los Angeles, California)
The chemical formula for ethanol is C2H5OH.
Because poly ethenol is a water soluble plastic. And in hospitals, the staff want to avoid contact with hospital laundry which might be infected. So, these items are placed in poly ethenol bags so that when washing begins, the bags dissolve in water and the laundry is washed.
Ethenol
hydrogenetic ethenol with a 50% aluminum base
I have an 08 Ram with the 4.7 I get between 15 - 16.5 arround town and about 18 on road trips (highway). But beware of using E10 fuel (gasoline enhanced with 10% ethenol), it will drop your milage by about 10%.......and it cost the same as reg. unleaded.
As of recent estimates, California consumes approximately 14 billion gallons of gasoline annually. This figure can vary slightly year to year due to changes in population, fuel efficiency, and economic conditions. California's efforts to promote alternative energy sources and public transportation may also influence future gasoline consumption trends.
Pump gas can, but most race fuels do not.
As of recent estimates, California consumes approximately 14 billion gallons of gasoline annually. This figure can vary slightly from year to year due to factors like changes in population, economic conditions, and fuel efficiency improvements. California's stringent environmental regulations and a growing shift towards electric vehicles are also influencing gasoline consumption trends in the state.
I think the use of ethanol is great for our enviroment. Check out this site and learn all about ethenol. Ethonal is the same type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages. It can be used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel alternative to gasoline, and is widely used in cars in Brazil. Because it is easy to manufacture and process and can be made from very common crops such as sugar cane and corn, it is an increasingly common alternative to gasoline in some parts of the world. Using Ethanol could help our gasoline problems out quite a bit.