In the absence of oxygen, it would vaporize- boil away- and recondense when it cooled again. Some of the fractions might decompose, cracking rings and breaking bonds, but it's tough to say which ones. Gasoline is such a mish-mash of organic compounds that depend upon supply and demand at the time of processing.
2006-09-04 10:00:09
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Gasoline does NOT decompose in fires: it undergoes combustion. Generally, the bonds (C----C, and C----H) are broken and new ones are formed to give carbon dioxide ( O---C---O) and steam (H---O---H). It's an exothermic reaction, as everyone knows. Of course, without oxygen, no burning of gasoline can take place. Cracking of the longer chains may take place (even though those are not very long to begin with). Not sure if individual carbon and hydrogen atoms or ions will be formed at this temperature.
2006-09-04 12:05:09
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answer #2
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answered by flandargo 5
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2016-11-24 21:36:38
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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