biomass
The common name for burning sticks made of a carbon and hydrogen compound is "wood fire" or simply "burning wood".
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
Cars run on burning of fossil fuel, which is mainly hydrocarbons, compound of carbon and hydrogen which on oxidation (burning) produces Carbon dioxide, water (and Carbon Monoxide if oxygen is not sufficient for combustion).
The main content is the same. Of the wood is carbon and hydrogen, and that of fossil fuels is hydrogen and carbon. So when wood and fossil fuels are burnt the Carbon combines with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, and the hydrogen combines with oxygen to produce water (H2O). C+O2--> CO2+CO
co2 (carbon dioxide) and water (hydrogen). Hope this helped!
Water (hydrogen oxide) and carbon dioxide
Even though burning hydrogen produces water as a byproduct, the process of hydrogen production often involves emitting carbon dioxide, especially if the hydrogen is derived from natural gas through a process called steam methane reforming. Additionally, the infrastructure and machinery used to extract, transport, and burn hydrogen can also create carbon emissions. Therefore, calling the electricity produced by burning hydrogen "carbon-free" can be misleading.
No, burning hydrogen does not produce carbon dioxide. When hydrogen is burned, it reacts with oxygen to form water vapor, releasing energy in the process. Carbon dioxide is produced when carbon-containing fuels, such as fossil fuels, are burned.
Production of Glucose in Plants
Because both are hydrocarbons (having only carbon and hydrogen) so produce only carbon dioxide and water vapours on combustion.
Carbon-carbon and crabon-hydrogen and I want to know the other! Carbon-carbon and crabon-hydrogen and I want to know the other!
hydrocarbon are made of hydrogen and carbon