Petroleum Naphtha is a general term that has been referring to flammable liquid
hydrocarbon mixtures, and it has been produced from natural gas condensates, petroleum
distillates, and the distillation of coal tar and peat.
Naphtha is used as a feedstock to produce a vast variety of petrochemicals such as
Ethylene, Propylene, Styrene, and Butadiene etc. which find varied applications in industries
like rubber, plastics, solvents, and many others.
Price: Depends on the market price
Origin: United Arab Emirates
Specs: Light & Heavy
Packaging: Flexi Tanks/ Barrel
Naphtha is a flammable liquid made from distilling petroleum. It looks like gasoline. Naphtha is used to dilute heavy oil to help move it through pipelines, to make high-octane gas, to make lighter fluid, and even to clean metal. It is a liquid petroleum product that boils from about 30�°C (86�°F) to approximately 200�°C (392�°F), although there are different grades of naphtha within this extensive boiling range that have different boiling ranges. The term petroleum solvent is often used synonymously with naphtha. On a chemical basis, naphtha is difficult to define precisely because it can contain varying amounts of its constituents (paraffins, naphthenes, aromatics, and olefins) in different proportions, in addition to the potential isomers of the paraffins that exist in the naphtha boiling range. Naphtha is also represented as having a boiling range and carbon number similar to those of gasoline a precursor to gasoline.
Naphtha is a flammable liquid made from distilling petroleum. It looks like gasoline. Naphtha is used to dilute heavy oil to help move it through pipelines, to make high-octane gas, to make lighter fluid, and even to clean metal. It is a liquid petroleum product that boils from about 30�??�?�°C (86�??�?�°F) to approximately 200�??�?�°C (392�??�?�°F), although there are different grades of naphtha within this extensive boiling range that have different boiling ranges. The term petroleum solvent is often used synonymously with naphtha. On a chemical basis, naphtha is difficult to define precisely because it can contain varying amounts of its constituents (paraffins, naphthenes, aromatics, and olefins) in different proportions, in addition to the potential isomers of the paraffins that exist in the naphtha boiling range. Naphtha is also represented as having a boiling range and carbon number similar to those of gasoline a precursor to gasoline. Bulk Quantity
Supplier: Petroleum naphtha and petroleum gas
Supplier: Bitumen 60/70, petroleum asphalt , diesel en590, jet fuel a1, d2, kerosine fuel, crude oil, light cycle oil (lco) , mazut, polyethylene(ldpe,lldpe,hdpe) ,liquefied petroleum gas (lpg) , liquefied natural gas (lng) ,automotive gas oil (ago), fuel oil (ifo) , cst , base oil, diesel ultra low sulphur (ulsd), eastern siberian pacific ocean (espo), crude oil, petroleum coke, urea, naphtha, sulfur, gasoline octanes, rebco, copper cathode and etc.
Supplier: Diesel en590, jet fuel a1, d2, kerosene oil fuel, crude oil, light cycle oil (lco) , liquefied petroleum gas (lpg) , liquefied natural gas (lng) , automotive gas oil (ago), fuel oil (ifo) , cst , base oil, diesel ultra low sulphur (ulsd), eastern siberian pacific ocean (espo), crude oil, petroleum coke, urea, naphtha, gasoline octanes, rebco. wheat, barley, sorghum, corn, oats
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Supplier: Oil derivatives, oil, naphtha, diesel, bitumen, petroleum coke, diesel fuel, LPG gas, petrochemical raw materials, all kinds of fertilizers, gasoline a87, gasoline a92, gasoline a95, gasoline a97, hydrocarbon oil, base oil, sn 150,n500, sn500 ,sn 70,sn 70 r2, urea fertilizer, ammonia, hdpe, lldpe, ldpe
Aviation Jet Fuel is a type of aviation fuel designed for use in aircraft powered by gas-turbine engines. It is colourless to straw coloured in appearance. The most commonly used fuels for commercial aviation are Jet A and Jet A1, which are produced to a standardised international specification. The only other jet fuel commonly used in civilian turbine-engine powered aviation is Jet B, which is used for its enhanced cold-weather performance. Jet fuel is a mixture of a variety of hydrocarbons. Because the exact composition of jet fuel varies widely based on petroleum source, it is impossible to define jet fuel as a ratio of specific hydrocarbons. Jet fuel is therefore defined as a performance specification rather than a chemical compound. Aviation Jet Fuel is commonly referred to as JP54. However, this is the wrong terminology as there is no such grade of Jet Fuel. Jet A and Jet A1 are what refineries offer. Aviation Jet fuel Gas is what powers turbine aircraft engines. Worldwide, Jet Fuel is the most used low Sulphur content Kerosene. For instance, Colonial JP54 is similar to Jet A except the energy is 18.4 mj/Kg compared to the 42.8 MJ/kg of Jet A. Most importantly there is also a slight difference in additives. Aviation Jet Fuel B is used for its extremely cold weather performance. However, aviation Jet fuel Bs lighter composition makes it more dangerous to handle. For this reason, it is rarely used except in very cold climates. A blend of approximately 30% Kerosene and 70% Gasoline. Because of its very low freezing point (60 C (76 F), it is known as a wide cut fuel and has a low flash point as well. Aviation Jet Fuel B is primarily used in some military aircraft. In Canada, it is also used because of its freezing point. Aviation Kerosene standards are published as GOST10227-86. The standard consists of different properties. It separates paraffin and gasoline in the refinery. Military organisations around the world use a different classification system of JP (for Jet Propellant) numbers. Some are almost identical to their civilian counterparts and differ only by the amounts of a few additives. For instance, Jet A1 is similar to JP 8, Jet B is similar to JP 4. Military fuels are highly specialised products and are developed for very specific applications. Jet fuels are sometimes classified as kerosene or naphtha type. Kerosene type fuels include Jet A, Jet A1, JP 5 and JP 8. Naphthatype jet fuels, sometimes referred to as wide cut Jet Fuel, including Jet B and JP 4.
We sell Oil and Gas Products Wholesale Eastern Siberia-pacific ocean oil ( espo) Liquified natural gas Liquified petroleum gas Ultra -low sulphur diesel ( EN590) Light cycle oil Petroleum coke Jet fuel A1 Mazut Aviation fuel A-1 & Jp54 Bitumen Base oil Diammonium phosphate Naphtha Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel EN590,DIESEL D2,DIESEL VIRGIN OIL D6 We are an oil and gas company Agents, Facilitators and Mandate; we source crude oil for Refineries and large volume buyers, and other petrochemicals like AGO, LPFO, PMS, DPK and other Russia product origin listed below for the upstream and downstream sectors consumption.
Aviation Jet Fuel is a type of aviation fuel designed for use in aircraft powered by gas-turbine engines. It is colourless to straw coloured in appearance. The most commonly used fuels for commercial aviation are Jet A and Jet A1, which are produced to a standardised international specification. The only other jet fuel commonly used in civilian turbine-engine powered aviation is Jet B, which is used for its enhanced cold-weather performance. Jet fuel is a mixture of a variety of hydrocarbons. Because the exact composition of jet fuel varies widely based on petroleum source, it is impossible to define jet fuel as a ratio of specific hydrocarbons. Jet fuel is therefore defined as a performance specification rather than a chemical compound. Aviation Jet Fuel is commonly referred to as JP54. However, this is the wrong terminology as there is no such grade of Jet Fuel. Jet A and Jet A1 are what refineries offer. Aviation Jet fuel Gas is what powers turbine aircraft engines. Worldwide, Jet Fuel is the most used low Sulphur content Kerosene. For instance, Colonial JP54 is similar to Jet A except the energy is 18.4 mj/Kg compared to the 42.8 MJ/kg of Jet A. Most importantly there is also a slight difference in additives. Aviation Jet Fuel B is used for its extremely cold weather performance. However, aviation Jet fuel Bs lighter composition makes it more dangerous to handle. For this reason, it is rarely used except in very cold climates. A blend of approximately 30% Kerosene and 70% Gasoline. Because of its very low freezing point (60 C (76 F), it is known as a wide cut fuel and has a low flash point as well. Aviation Jet Fuel B is primarily used in some military aircraft. In Canada, it is also used because of its freezing point. Aviation Kerosene standards are published as GOST10227-86. The standard consists of different properties. It separates paraffin and gasoline in the refinery. Military organisations around the world use a different classification system of JP (for Jet Propellant) numbers. Some are almost identical to their civilian counterparts and differ only by the amounts of a few additives. For instance, Jet A1 is similar to JP 8, Jet B is similar to JP 4. Military fuels are highly specialised products and are developed for very specific applications. Jet fuels are sometimes classified as kerosene or naphtha type. Kerosene type fuels include Jet A, Jet A1, JP 5 and JP 8. Naphthatype jet fuels, sometimes referred to as wide cut Jet Fuel, including Jet B and JP 4.