Any & all fossil fuels.
It depends on your meaning of reactive:Carbon dioxide gas, which is responsible for global warming and climate change.Carbon dioxide also dissolves in water reacting to produce carbonic acidCarbon monoxide is produced at low levels and can be burned, a classic meaning of reactiveWater vapour is produced which reacts with oxides of nitrogen and sulfur to produce acid rain
Oxygen
When hydrogen is burned the product is pure water vapor. Here is the equation: 2H2 + O2 = 2H2O.
Combustion.
Yes, that is how they are used to generate electricity.
Any & all fossil fuels.
Being hydrocarbons, they produce water and carbon dioxide when burnt in air.
Usually that happens when the fuel is burned.
Usually, fuel is burned to achieve this.
fossil fuels produce sulfur dioxide when burned because sulfur is present in them. things like coal which is carbon or gas which is a hydrocarbon are examples of this. fossil fuels are bad because sulfur dioxide causes acid rain. hope this helps :)
Fossil fuels produce electricity when they are burned to make steam or smoke which turns generators to make electricity. But we must be careful that we are not burning too much fossil fuels so that we will run out one day. :)
hydrocarbons( carbon and hydrogen)
Fossil fuels produce large quantities of carbon dioxide when burned. Carbon emissions trap heat in the atmosphere and lead to climate change.
Hydrogen is the only fuel that forms exclusively water when burned. Other fuels will form water in addition to other by-products such as carbon dioxide.
No. They are extracting existing heat from the earth, and converting that to electrical power. There are no fossil fuels burned there.
They are fuels that, when burned, have no carbon emmisions.