CO, CO2, H2O and more comlicated structures.
Sulfur dioxide is produced only if the hydrocarbons are contaminated with sulfur compounds.
This depends on the chemical composition of the hydrocarbon.
When hydrocarbons combust, they typically react with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) as primary products. Incomplete combustion may also occur, leading to the formation of carbon monoxide (CO) and soot (carbon particles) alongside CO2 and H2O. The specific products can vary depending on the type of hydrocarbon and the conditions of the combustion process.
The process is called cracking, where high-molecular-weight hydrocarbons are broken down into smaller molecules. This can be done through thermal cracking (heating the hydrocarbons at high temperatures) or catalytic cracking (using a catalyst to speed up the reaction). The smaller hydrocarbons produced, such as gasoline and diesel, are important components of fuels.
hydrocarbons( carbon and hydrogen)
semi solids and hydrocarbons
Sulfur dioxide is produced only if the hydrocarbons are contaminated with sulfur compounds.
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This depends on the chemical composition of the hydrocarbon.
The process you are referring to is known as cracking. Cracking involves breaking down larger, less valuable hydrocarbons into smaller, more valuable hydrocarbons such as gasoline and diesel. This process improves the quality and effectiveness of the fuel produced.
Certainly. All hydrocarbons produce carbon dioxide when burned.
A match can't spontaneously combust because it need someone or something to strike it. It can't combust on it's own TRC
You are mistaken. The element krypton is a noble gas, which does not combust.
When hydrocarbons combust, they typically react with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) as primary products. Incomplete combustion may also occur, leading to the formation of carbon monoxide (CO) and soot (carbon particles) alongside CO2 and H2O. The specific products can vary depending on the type of hydrocarbon and the conditions of the combustion process.
The process is called cracking, where high-molecular-weight hydrocarbons are broken down into smaller molecules. This can be done through thermal cracking (heating the hydrocarbons at high temperatures) or catalytic cracking (using a catalyst to speed up the reaction). The smaller hydrocarbons produced, such as gasoline and diesel, are important components of fuels.
no!
hydrocarbons( carbon and hydrogen)