No. It stores potential chemical energy and burning it produces an exothermic reaction as it oxidises.
Fossil fuels such as coal store chemical kinetic energy?
The energy in coal is chemical energy. The usual way to extract it is to burn the coal converting it to heat energy. This can then be turned into electrical energy Fuels like gasoline and coal are sources of energy which means they store energy
Coal has potential chemical energy which is released as heat when it is burned.
chemical energy is stored in coal
Nonrenewable fossil fuels, like oil and coal, store a lot chemical energy in the bonds between its molecules. When these fossil fuels are burned, the chemical energy is released.
Fossil fuels such as coal store chemical kinetic energy?
Coal stores chemical energy, which is a type of potential energy.
Coal is a fossil fuel, which possesses potential chemical energy. It is not nuclear or kinetic
Coal stores energy from the sun in the form of chemical energy
coal have chemical energy
The energy in coal is chemical energy. The usual way to extract it is to burn the coal converting it to heat energy. This can then be turned into electrical energy Fuels like gasoline and coal are sources of energy which means they store energy
The energy in coal is chemical energy. The usual way to extract it is to burn the coal converting it to heat energy. This can then be turned into electrical energy Fuels like gasoline and coal are sources of energy which means they store energy
Nonrenewable fossil fuels, like oil and coal, store a lot chemical energy in the bonds between its molecules. When these fossil fuels are burned, the chemical energy is released.
It's kinetic
chemical energy is stored in coal
Chemical Energy TransformationsChemical Light,Chemical Mechanical,Chemical Electrical,Chemical Heat.
-- chemical (coal, oil, wood, biomass) -- nuclear -- gravity (hydro) -- natural kinetic (wind, tide) -- direct solar (photovoltaic)