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Straight-run kerosene

Synonyms Kerosene, straight-run kerosene, range oil, JP-5 jet fuel kerosine Fuel oil no. 1 -D No CAS number... [Pg.352]

Synonyms Coal oil Kerosine Kerosine (petroleum) Straight-run kerosene Straight-run kerosine... [Pg.2304]

Stractan. See Arabinogalactan Straight-run kerosene Straight-run kerosine. See Kerosene Strained honey. See Honey Stratos . See Cycloxydim Strawberry aldehyde. See Ethyl methylphenylglycidate Strawberry furanone. See 4-Hydroxy-2,5-dimethyl-3(2H) furanone Strawberry tree extract. See Arbutus unedo extract... [Pg.4220]

Primary Name Kerosene Common Synonyms JP-5 navy fuel/marine diesel fuel Deodorized kerosene JP5 Jet fuel AF 100 (pesticide) Caswell No. 517 EINECS 232-366-4 EPA Pesticide Chemical Code 063501 Fuel oil No. 1 Fuels, kerosine Shell 140 Shell sol 2046 Distillate fuel oils, light Kerosene, straight run Kerosine, (petroleum) Several Others. [Pg.476]

Petroleum refining begins by fractional distillation of crude oil into three principal cuts according to boiling point (bp) straight-run gasoline (bp 30-200 °C), kerosene (bp 175-300 °C), and heating oil, or diesel fuel (bp 275-400 °C). Further distillation under reduced pressure then yields... [Pg.99]

The term white distillate is applied to all the refinery streams with a distillation range between approximately 80 and 360°C (175 to 680°F) at atmospheric pressure and with properties similar to the corresponding straight-run distillate from atmospheric crude distillation. Light distillate products (i.e., naphtha, kerosene, jet fuel, diesel fuel, and heating oil) are all manufactured by appropriate blending of white distillate streams. [Pg.75]

The distillate manufacturing processes of diesel fuel oils, such as fuel oil 1-D and fuel oil 2-D, are similar to those of fuel oil no. 1 and fuel oil no. 2, respectively (lARC 1989). Fuel oil no. 1-D is manufactured from a straight-run distillate process. Diesel fuel oil (1-D, 2-D) is defined as the fraction of petroleum that distills after kerosene (Air Force 1989). Fuel oil no. 2-D is also made from mixing of straight-run and catalytically cracked distillates (LARC 1989). [Pg.119]

Vernot EH, Drew RT, Kane ML. 1990d. Acute toxicological evaluation of straight run kerosene. J Am Coll Toxicol Part B 1(1) 30-31. [Pg.195]

In naphtha and light distillate components, oxygen-containing compounds appear as carboxylic acids and phenols. Most of these compounds concentrate in the kerosene, fuel oil, and lighter lubricant fractions. Straight-run gasoline, heavy distillates, and residual fuels usually contain few acids. [Pg.38]

Jet fuels are typically prepared from either straight-run kerosene or from wide-cut kerosene/naphtha blends off of the atmospheric distillation unit. TABLE 3-10 briefly describes the composition of some typical jet fuel grades. [Pg.50]

Today s diesel fuel grades are blends which may contain straight-run distillate, cycle oil, various gas oils, and heavy cracked distillates. Kerosene or jet fuel may be blended into the diesel to improve the low-temperature viscosity and handling characteristics of the fuel. [Pg.54]

The problems created by sulfur have changed as the industry progressed just over twenty-five years ago the main problems were to make straight-run gasoline and kerosene without offensive odor and of suitably low sulfur content. Since then the complexities... [Pg.153]

NAPHTHENIC ACIDS. The term naphthenic acid, as commonly used in the petroleum industry, refers collectively to all of the carboxylic adds present m crude oil. Naphthenic adds are classified as monobasic carboxylic acids of the general formula RCOOH, where R represents the naphthene moiety consisting of cyclopentine and cyclohexane derivatives. Naphthenic adds are composed predominantly of alkyl-substituted cycloaliphatic carboxylic adds, with smaller amounts of acyclic aliphatic (paraffinic or fatty) acids. Aromatic, okfinic. hydroxy, and dibasic acids are considered to be minor components. Commercial naphthenic aads also contain varying amounts of unsaponifiable hydrocarbons, phenolic compounds, sulfur compounds, and water. The complex mixture of adds is derived from straight-run distillates of petroleum, mostly from kerosene and diesel fractions. See also Petroleum. [Pg.1052]

SYNS COAL OIL DEOBASE KEROSINE KEROSINE (petroleum) STRAIGHT-RUN KEROSENE... [Pg.812]

Until 1913, all motor gasoline was produced by simple distillation of crude oil to separate the virgin or straight-run gasoline from the kerosene and heavier oil. Both the quantity and quality of straight-run gasoline were limited to what nature happened to provide. There was considerable variation in crude oils from different sources, but the average yield of... [Pg.273]

Light distillate (straight-run kerosene or SRK), containing compounds that boil in the range 175°C to 230°C (350°F to 450°F). Light distillate is hydro treated to remove sulfur and can then be blended into jet fuel or sold as kerosene (sometimes called paraffin) for lamp and cooking fuel. [Pg.186]


See other pages where Straight-run kerosene is mentioned: [Pg.27]    [Pg.830]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.979]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.830]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.979]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.689]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.1891]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.479]    [Pg.502]   


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Kerosene

Running

Straight

Straight run

Straightness

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