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  2. Crude oil and other liquids produced from fossil fuels are refined into petroleum products that people use for many different purposes. Biofuels are also used as petroleum products, mostly in mixtures with gasoline and diesel fuel.

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    • Overview
    • Chemical and physical properties
    • Extraction and processing

    crude oil, liquid petroleum that is found accumulated in various porous rock formations in Earth’s crust and is extracted for burning as fuel or for processing into chemical products.

    A summary treatment of crude oil follows. For full treatment, see petroleum, petroleum production, and petroleum refining.

    Britannica Quiz

    13 True-or-False Questions from Britannica’s Easiest Science Quizzes

    Crude oil is a mixture of comparatively volatile liquid hydrocarbons (compounds composed mainly of hydrogen and carbon), though it also contains some nitrogen, sulfur, and oxygen. Those elements form a large variety of complex molecular structures, some of which cannot be readily identified. Regardless of variations, however, almost all crude oil ranges from 82 to 87 percent carbon by weight and 12 to 15 percent hydrogen by weight.

    Crude oils are customarily characterized by the type of hydrocarbon compound that is most prevalent in them: paraffins, naphthenes, and aromatics. Paraffins are the most common hydrocarbons in crude oil; certain liquid paraffins are the major constituents of gasoline (petrol) and are therefore highly valued. Naphthenes are an important part of all liquid refinery products, but they also form some of the heavy asphaltlike residues of refinery processes. Aromatics generally constitute only a small percentage of most crudes. The most common aromatic in crude oil is benzene, a popular building block in the petrochemical industry.

    Because crude oil is a mixture of such widely varying constituents and proportions, its physical properties also vary widely. In appearance, for instance, it ranges from colourless to black. Possibly the most important physical property is specific gravity (i.e., the ratio of the weight of equal volumes of a crude oil and pure water at standard conditions). In laboratory measurement of specific gravity, it is customary to assign pure water a measurement of 1; substances lighter than water, such as crude oil, would receive measurements less than 1. The petroleum industry, however, uses the American Petroleum Institute (API) gravity scale, in which pure water has been arbitrarily assigned an API gravity of 10°. Liquids lighter than water, such as oil, have API gravities numerically greater than 10. On the basis of their API gravity, crude oils can be classified as heavy, medium, and light as follows:

    •Heavy: 10–20° API gravity

    •Medium: 20–25° API gravity

    •Light: above 25° API gravity

    Crude oil occurs underground, at various pressures depending on depth. It can contain considerable natural gas, kept in solution by the pressure. In addition, water often flows into an oil well along with liquid crude and gas. All these fluids are collected by surface equipment for separation. Clean crude oil is sent to storage at near atmospheric pressure, usually aboveground in cylindrical steel tanks that may be as large as 30 metres (100 feet) in diameter and 10 metres (33 feet) tall. Often crude oil must be transported from widely distributed production sites to treatment plants and refineries. Overland movement is largely through pipelines. Crude from more isolated wells is collected in tank trucks and taken to pipeline terminals; there is also some transport in specially constructed railroad cars. Overseas transport is conducted in specially designed tanker ships. Tanker capacities vary from less than 100,000 barrels to more than 3,000,000 barrels.

    The primary destination of crude oil is a refinery. There any combination of three basic functions is carried out: (1) separating the many types of hydrocarbon present in crude oils into fractions of more closely related properties, (2) chemically converting the separated hydrocarbons into more desirable reaction products, and (3) purifying the products of unwanted elements and compounds. The main process for separating the hydrocarbon components of crude oil is fractional distillation. Crude oil fractions separated by distillation are passed on for subsequent processing into numerous products, ranging from gasoline and diesel fuel to heating oil to asphalt. The proportions of products that may be obtained by distillation of five typical crude oils, ranging from heavy Venezuelan Boscan to the light Bass Strait oil produced in Australia, are shown in the figure. Given the pattern of modern demand (which tends to be highest for transportation fuels such as gasoline), the market value of a crude oil generally rises with increasing yields of light products.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jul 18, 2024 · Crude oil is a raw natural resource that is extracted from the earth and refined into products such as gasoline, jet fuel, and other petroleum products.

    • Daniel Liberto
    • 2 min
  4. Oct 19, 2023 · Crude oil migrates easily through a layer of sandstone, for instance, but would be trapped beneath a layer of shale. Geologists, chemists, and engineers look for geological structures that typically trap petroleum. They use a process called “ seismic reflection ” to locate underground rock structures that might have trapped crude oil ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PetroleumPetroleum - Wikipedia

    Petroleum or crude oil, also referred to as simply oil, is a naturally occurring yellowish-black liquid mixture of mainly hydrogencarbons, [1] and is found in geological formations. The name petroleum covers both naturally occurring unprocessed crude oil and petroleum products that consist of refined crude oil.

    • 83 to 85%
    • 0.1 to 2%
    • 10 to 14%
    • 0.05 to 1.5%
  6. www.energyeducation.ca › encyclopedia › OilOil - Energy Education

    In general, oil is a liquid that is made up of organic molecules. However, in the context of the world's energy sector oil, or more specifically, crude oil is the liquid fossil fuel that is extracted from the ground. Roughly 1/3 of the world's primary energy comes from this primary fuel.

  7. Oct 12, 2022 · Today, crude oil has over a thousand applications, such as powering cars, trucks, locomotives, power plants, factories, and ships; providing lubricants, greases, waxes, and asphalt; and as the source for petrochemical products like pharmaceuticals and plastics present in our daily lives.

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