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Liquefied Petroleum Gas

This is the transcript of almost the entire speech by Governor Palin on the Seward House in Auburn. Magnificent speech: national security, energy, economy, and a final value well suited for social conservatives. Repeated several ideas from the speech of presentation by Michael Reagan in Anchorage, and several phrases that had just delivered to 20,000 people before the council. This speech was for a fundraising event private, and is very good. (Redirected from Liquefied Gas)
Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is a mixture of condensable gases present in gas or dissolved in oil. The components of LPG, although temperature and pressure are gases, they are easy to condense, hence its name. In practice, one can say that LPG is a mixture of propane and butane.
Propane and butane are present in crude oil and natural gas, while some was obtained during the refining of petroleum, largely as a byproduct of the fractional catalytic (FCC, for its initials in English Fluid Catalytic Cracking).

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