Hmm now wait a minute. I'm not so sure about that.
Literary cracking open the petrochem book on this one, but xylene does some reeeeeeeeely weird shit when in petroleum distillates and under pressure. Gasoline is a distillate, ethanol is a methyl group alcohol. Have watched 2500ft of ice come screaming out of the earth on a hot July day from 6000 ft underground due to a xylene and methanol injection under 9600psi. Yes, have pics, did happen.
Conditions are similar. Alcohol, xylene, distillates, compression, hydrostatic force, differential pressure, atomization of a cornucopia of alcohols, hydrocarbons, fawking scourge of life xylene, and acetone as a wildcard.... And then you introduce oxygen and spark... Nah, you're going to get some really cool combustion by-products. I need to do math, but something tells me carbon (haha) or tar solvent. Or heavy etching agent that erodes what's left of a scorched converter by dumping something horrible to it. Will report back