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Why crude oil should not be used as fuel?

Why crude oil should not be used as fuel?

The answer is no, because each crude oil is very different and made up of a large number of hydrocarbon. Crude oil is a highly variable mixture of heavy and light hydrocarbons that need to be separated in a refinery to turn them into usable products.

Can crude oil be used as fuel?

The first part of refining crude oil is to heat it until it boils. The boiling liquid is separated into different liquids and gases in a distillation column. These liquids are used to make petrol, paraffin, diesel fuel etc. The boiling oil turns into a mixture of gases in the column.

How is crude oil different from fuel?

Crude Oil and Natural Gas are both fossil fuels formed from the remains of dead animal and plants over the course of thousands of years. The biggest difference between Crude Oil and Natural Gas is their molecular makeup. Crude Oil is comprised of a wide and diverse selection of complex hydrocarbons.

Why is crude oil used as a fuel?

Crude oil is a mixture of long chain and small chain hydrocarbons, which are only useful when used separately. The long chain hydrocarbons, having higher boiling point, higher flash point, and high viscosity are difficult to ignite and can not be used as a fuel, but are useful as a lubricant.

Why does crude oil have to be refined before it is refined?

If the oil is used to make plastics or other oil-based products the process would be almost impossible with crude oil because the starting point of the chemical reaction would be impossible to regulate because it would start with a mix of different molecules.

Why is crude oil not used in industrial applications?

Raw or unprocessed crude oil is not generally useful in industrial applications. Crude oil is a mixture of different oils (the difference being the number of carbon atoms in the chains that make up the oil). Different crude oils from different sources have different mixes of these oils so the first problem is that not all crude oils are the same.

What makes up the molecules of crude oil?

Organic compound consisting of carbon and hydrogen. Hydrocarbons are the principal constituents of crude oil, natural gas and petroleum products. molecules. The lightest molecules, dissolved gases, have 1 to 4 carbon atoms, while the heaviest have over 20.

Crude oil is a mixture of long chain and small chain hydrocarbons, which are only useful when used separately. The long chain hydrocarbons, having higher boiling point, higher flash point, and high viscosity are difficult to ignite and can not be used as a fuel, but are useful as a lubricant.

Raw or unprocessed crude oil is not generally useful in industrial applications. Crude oil is a mixture of different oils (the difference being the number of carbon atoms in the chains that make up the oil). Different crude oils from different sources have different mixes of these oils so the first problem is that not all crude oils are the same.

If the oil is used to make plastics or other oil-based products the process would be almost impossible with crude oil because the starting point of the chemical reaction would be impossible to regulate because it would start with a mix of different molecules.

Why is crude oil an inefficient fuel?

The combination of these factors makes burning crude oil as a fuel very inefficient because it’s impossible to create one ideal set of conditions (e.g. in terms of oxygen availablibity, temperature, pressure, etc).

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Ruth Doyle