Organic vapors are the vapors that are caused by organic compounds and are petroleum based.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is organic because the molecule contains carbon. Nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2), and water vapor (H20) are inorganic: they contain no carbon.
Any combustion of an organic material produce carbon dioxide and water vapors.
Dihydrogen Monoxide.
Oil, gas, or coal power plants will release water vapor as part of the combustion process. When organic matter is burned, the byproducts will be water vapor and carbon dioxide. Carbon monoxide (a toxic gas) can also be released, as well as any other elements that contaminate the fuels: mercury is one common and dangerous pollutant.
Water vapor is a gas, not a mixture. Water vapor is just the gas form of water, it is not a mixture.Water Vapor is a compound made by bonding Hydrogen and Oxygen.
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organic vapor
Swamp vapor, or swamp gas, is methane gas. The methane gas is formed when the organic material in a swamp decays in the absence of air.
Liquid organic compounds are volatile because they change easily from liquid form to vapor. They will evaporate at temperatures of use and will cause oxygen in the air to be converted into smog-promoting ozone under favorable conditions.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is organic because the molecule contains carbon. Nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2), and water vapor (H20) are inorganic: they contain no carbon.
Any combustion of an organic material produce carbon dioxide and water vapors.
During the combustion of any organic material, there are two primary products. The first is water vapor and the second is carbon dioxide gas.
It depends on the fire, but if the fuel is largely organic matter and the amount of air is not restricted, the gas from the fire will be largely carbon dioxide and water vapor.
Smoke is made up of small particles, gases & water vapor. Water vapor is the majority. the remainder includes carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxide, irritant volatile organic compounds & air toxics.
J. Frederick Robertson has written: 'Distribution of volatile organic compounds in soil vapor in the vicinity of a defense fuel supply point, Hanahan, South Carolina' -- subject(s): Fuel, Environmental aspects, Soil vapor extraction, Jet planes, Soil pollution
Dihydrogen Monoxide.
gas, vapor