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Propane

A three-carbon alkane, propane is sometimes derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing.

Chemical Formula: C3H8

Lewis Structure: H H H | | | H-C-C-C-H | | | H H H

When commonly sold as fuel, it is also known as liquifed petroleum gas (LPG or LP gas) and is a mixture of propane with smaller amounts of propylene, butane and butylene. It is used as fuel in cooking on many barbecues and portable stoves and in motor vehicles. Propane powers some buses, forklifts, and taxies and is used for heat and cooking in recreational vehicles and campers. In many rural areas of the US, propane is also used in furnaces, water heaters, laundry driers, and other heat-producing appliances. Delivery trucks fill up large tanks that are permanently installed on the property (sometimes called pigs) or exchange bottles of propane.

See also

Referenced By

E-numbers | EU food additive code | E number | E numbers | Enumbers | Kerosene lamp | List of E Numbers | List of chemistry topics | List of compounds | List of compounds without articles | NYMEX | New York Mercantile Exchange | Paraffin lamp | Pressure lamp

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Propane".

 

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