Ember
It depends upon the situation. For there are two known equivalents in ancient, classical Latin for the English word 'coal'. A piece of coal is a piece of glowing carbon, or of charred wood. The Latin word pruna refers to the live coal, and the word carbo to burning or burned wood.
ember cinder ash clinker coal
Wood and coal are poor conductors of electricity, meaning they do not allow electricity to flow easily through them. In order to conduct electricity, a material needs to have free-moving electrons, which wood and coal lack. Therefore, drawing wires from wood or coal would not establish a conductive path for electricity.
No they live in the woods but not in a actual piece of wood.
No. Coal is fossil, wood is renewable, biomass.
It can in coal/wood stoves.
You simply insert a piece of iron ore into a furnace, and put in some coal, charcoal or wood for fuel
A partially burned piece of coal or wood is typically referred to as "charcoal." Charcoal is formed when organic material, such as wood, is heated in a low-oxygen environment, causing the volatile compounds to evaporate, leaving behind a carbon-rich residue. Charcoal is commonly used as a fuel source for cooking and heating due to its high carbon content and ability to burn at high temperatures.
It depends of the piece of wood itself and the type of wood that it is.
No it is not.
Coal burns hotter than wood because it has a higher carbon content and produces more heat when burned.
One example of a solid fuel is coal. Coal was used in many early factories during the beginning of the industrial, but was phased out because it was not a clean burning fuel source.