There has not been a biofuel developed that produces oxygen as a byproduct.
Yes. Biofuels (like ethanol from sugar cane) burn just the same as other fuels. Ethanol is a hydrocarbon containing Hydrogen, Oxygen and Carbon atoms. When combusted (with Oxygen from the atmosphere) they produce H2O, water (not pollution), but also produce Carbon Dioxide (CO2) and worse yet Carbon Monoxide (CO) (For why they produce CO and CO2, read up on incomplete combustion.). CO2 and CO are pollutants, they are greenhouse gases and contribute to global warming.
In order to grow the crops required to produce biofuels more forests need to be knocked down to make the necessary fields.
Algae can be used to produce biofuels such as biodiesel, bioethanol, and biogas. These biofuels are considered renewable and have the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions compared to fossil fuels.
It is the sum total of the biochemical processes that take Oxygen and biofuels and make mainly metabolism.
It is the sum total of the biochemical processes that take Oxygen and biofuels and make mainly metabolism.
I have a science project that you had to list biofuels,They are:Ethanol-that is Corn,barley and sorghumOther sources of sugar to produce ethanolthey are Potato skins, Rice, Sugar cane, Sugar, beets, Yard clippings, Bark and Switchgrass
biofuels are more efficient and produce less pollution . also more labour is needed in there production so they can create more jobs and help some people out of poverty.
SG Biofuels was created in 2007.
No. Bats don't produce oxygen. Bats are mammals and mammals need to oxygen to survive.
Corn derived ethanol. Anything that requires more energy to produce than is derived from the final product.
Bodies don't produce oxygen. we breathe it in.
Biofuels are fuel made from any plant or animal based products. Two traditional biofuels are wood and corn. Biofuels are renewable sources of energy.