gasoline
Most likely an extinguisher that uses sand or foam to choke the oxygen out of the flame because this type of fire is hard to put out with water or other means.
Water and oxygen
oxygen + gasoline burns
That depends on the fuel. Natural gas, methane, needs 2 molecules of oxygen, but gasoline, octane, needs 17 molecules of oxygen.
There is no reason for gasoline to explode in a tank. There is no heat or spark source in there. But the basic answer might be that there is little to no air (specifically oxygen) in the tank.
it can be renewed, you can split Water in half and half would be oxygen, so yes
nonrenewable resource like the oxygen we breath. the coal and petroleum used as fuel. there are many uses.
nonrenewable resource like the oxygen we breath. the coal and petroleum used as fuel. there are many uses.
Gasoline and oil. Also oxygen, CO2(carbon dioxide), and water. If electricity is natural resource, that too
No. Gasoline is a mixture of hydrocarbons. Liquid oxygen is oxygen that has been cooled to extremely low temperatures.
Carbon from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide. Thehydrogen from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form water vapor.
There are three things needed for fire. Fuel (gasoline), a spark and oxygen. So your answer is oxygen.
Petroleum is a nonrenewable resource because like oil it can eventually run out Unrefined petroleum is known as "crude oil" - it is oil, not like oil. Petroleum IS RENEWABLE, because it is refined from raw materials (crude oil) which is composed of minerals (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur and others) which never go away. The question should be: "HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE FOR CRUDE TO BE RENEWED?" And that is a question that nobody has the answer to. Scientific evidence is inconclusive and still a bone of contention.
I thinks its Oxygen and Gasoline
Gasoline vapor reacts explosively with the oxygen in air if ignited.
Renewable resources. Because they can be RENEWED.
Oxygen and heat.