Bulletin 114 Manufacture of Gasoline and Benzene Toluene from Petroleum and other Hydrocarbons

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 293
- File Size:
- 6828 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1916
Abstract
NOMENCLATURE USED IN THIS REPORT.
In this report the ending ene has been used throughout, except in
the bibliography and in quotations from the writings of previous
investigators, for all aromatic hydrocarbons, as, for instance, benzene,
toluene, xylene. The ending ol, though largely used in technical
description, is not correctly applicable to these hydrocarbons, and
should be used to designate the impure mixtures of commerce, as
distinguished from pure chemical compounds.
PRESENT STATUS OF PETROLEUM-REFINING INDUSTRY.
Although petroleum is widely distributed, being found in many
parts of the world, and although information as to its occurrence and
general characteristics seems to have existed from vcry early times,
our knowledge of the chemical nature of this substance has been
acquired largely within the past 40 years. Within this period a
voluminous literature has accumulated, which records work as painstaking
as has ever been undertaken in the whole field of chemistry,
such as that of C. M. Warren, F. H. Storer, S. P. Sadtler, S. F.
Peckham, and C. F. Mabery. Despite this fact, the commercial
method of treating crude petroleum for the purpose of procuring
marketable products is, in the main, essentially empirical. Much
knowledge has been acquired as to methods of separating from crude
petroleum such products as are desirable commercially, but little has
been done to attain the maximum recovery of such products.
Citation
APA:
(1916) Bulletin 114 Manufacture of Gasoline and Benzene Toluene from Petroleum and other HydrocarbonsMLA: Bulletin 114 Manufacture of Gasoline and Benzene Toluene from Petroleum and other Hydrocarbons. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1916.