yes
Sulfuric and nitric acids.
They reacting together to form nitrogen oxides. N2o is a example.
Wood is basically a cellulose based material consisting of mainly Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen. When it burns the main gases are thus, Carbon Dioxide and water in the form of steam. There are traces of other gases too such as CO and even traces of oxides of nitrogen and sulfur.
Water-soluble, nonmetallic oxides, can be attacked by alkalies and, in aqueous solution, they form acids; so they are called acidic oxides. Some examples include:Sulfuric, and other sulfurous acids, from oxides of sulfur,Nitric, and other nitrous acids, from oxides of Nitrogen,Phosphoric, and other phosphorous acids, from oxides of Phosphorous
they form mainly oxides
Carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur all form oxides which are gaseous at room temperature.
yes
Although nitrogen can form oxides it not flammable.
Sulfur oxides from the combustion of sulfur containing fuels for atmospheric sulfurous and sulfuric acid. Nitrogen oxides form nitrous and nitric acids.
Ozone
Sulfuric and nitric acids.
Nitrogen burns to form Nitrogen Dioxide at about 2200F. It is an exothermic reaction, meaning it will produce heat sufficient to sustain itself if the heat is confined, for example in an internal combustion engine.
it is produced form animals, plants and factory.
acidic gases - e.g. oxides of non-metals - so oxides of sulfur and nitrogen will form acids
Combustion. Fossil fuels contain carbon, hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen and some other elements. But the largest is Carbon. So when such fuels burn they combine with the Oxygen and Nitrogen in air to form Carbon dioxide, Nitrogen oxides etc. Any form of carbon when burns produces carbon dioxide.
Oxygen and Nitrogen from the air react at engine temperature. This makes nitrogen monoxide which, when it is released into the atmosphere reacts with more oxygen in the air to form nitrogen dioxide :)
Nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides released into the atmosphere form sulfuric and nitric acid when they come in contact with moisture,