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Chemical energy is the potential of a chemical substance to undergo a transformation through a chemical reaction or to transform other chemical substances. Examples of chemical energy are: the digestive process, batteries, photosynthesis, burning gasoline, burning wood, using TNT, fire works, putting salt on a slug, alcohol, fermentation, and rusting.
reducing a carboxylic acid directly forms an aldehyde, but further reduction forms a primary alcohol reducing a ketone forms a secondary alcohol oxidation reverses these processes primary alcohol -> aldehyde -> carboxylic acid secondary alcohol -> ketone
What you stated is true for an OBJECT. The energy contained in the 'Substance' that the Object is made of includes its "Atomic Energy", and its Chemical Energy.
Energy can only really be changed into other forms of energy. However, you can use energy to generate force, pressure, torque, etc. For example, when gasoline is burned in a car engine, chemical energy gets converted into mechanical energy (sort of like force times speed).
forms
Light and heat.
No, it is a non-renewable form of energy.
ligth and nuclear
Light and heat.
Heat and light.
Heat and light.
When a chemical bond forms, energy is absorbed between the atoms that bond. When a chemical bond is broken, energy is immediately and dramatically released.
Yes,burning fuel is a useful chemical reaction as energy is released and can be converted into different forms to do useful work
Wind energy, water energy, energy from burning wood, even petroleum, since it is believed this has been produced by decomposition of plants.
Burning or rapid oxidation is a chemical reaction which releases heat.
By heat and light because a candle gives of of heat and it is lit so in some cases we need to see in the dark
The form of potential energy that organic compounds hold is called fuel. On burning these compounds, the heat can be converted into other forms of energy.