Want this question answered?
it is a poison to humans. it is the smell that it is.
run it on the fluff cycle for a couple of hours, no heat. if it still has smell, put carpet fresh or baking soda in a pillowcase , sew it up and run it on air only.
No, silver nitrate is not explosive, although it does burn very rapidly ---- Well no, neither will it burn. What it is is an oxidiser, thus it must be mixed with a suitable reducing agent (fuel) for it to burn or explode.
It explodes because of the high Energy and because it has a lot of isotopes and and if you put some Einsteinium in it, it will destroy a planet the size of Jupiter +++ :-). Seriously though, that is what a Fuel Cell is supposed to do - take Hydrogen and Oxygen, but to produce electricity in a controlled manner, not explode.
Nitric acid is strong oxidizer, so if it is mixed with a right fuel it can be possible of denotation. The salts it may form can also be strong oxidizers. However, nitric acid itself is not explosive.
Yes,Airplanes can explode because their Fuel Tanks. The Fuel Tanks contain Fuel.
A fuel smell inside a house should be ventilated immediately. Open doors and windows and allow this to air out. Scrub the area with a mild soap and hot water to diminish the fuel left on the floor.
don't poop so much fanny breath :)
I really don't know try going to someone else
Any combustible can explode when given the right condition. For example even small fiber from a corn mill in a containment can explode. So yes jet fuel can explode. For this condition you have to be aware of temperature ,volume, and the state of fuel is it solid or gaseous state or both, open air or containment. Yes jet fuel can explode under the right conditions.
yes
when an oil burner ignites, it pressurizes the combustion chamber for a few seconds. the unburned oil, smoke can force its way into the surrounding fresh air chamber (heat exchanger) that then circulates into the house. A crack or hole in the heat exhanger can be checked by technician. failure of heat exchanger usually requires replacement of unit. telltale signs of heat exchanger failure are dark dirty walls around heating vents. the soot is dirty and smells, but not as dangerous as carbon monoxide. have a competent service tech. check for leakage.
Fuel tends to explode or let the fire spread when it is lit.
gas becase its a fuel and dose not have flames if you spill it it will explode
In a 'meltdown', the nuclear fuel rods will overheat and melt, not explode. It is the build-up of pressure within the containment vessel that can cause an explosion.
you should have fuel injection if this is the case either the injectors are bad or the circuit that controls the injectors are faulty
If you smell gas from your vehicle it probably indicates a leak. Even a tiny leak will produce a fuel smell. If there is nothing obvious leaking from the fuel lines, pull the vacuum hose off the fuel pressure regulator, if there is any smell of fuel there or if gas is present, it is leaking and needs to be replaced.