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Well the output of any oven should be Heat (thermal energy), with exhaust fumes and gases as (unwanted) secondary outputs occurring in most designs. And the input can be any sort of fuel to produce said heat, depending on the oven. Most commonly, the input of an oven is electricity, gas, oil or wood.
Wood has chemical potential energy, when combustion occurs, you have fire. Fire is mostly heat and light energy.
The input force is you applying the ammount of force you will need to get the object to move. the output force is the object doing the work itself on other hands you do not have to do any work if there is 100% 0f out put force.
A log fire converts chemical potential energy stored in the wood into heat and light. The bonds in the wood are broken and release energy energy as they form lower energy bonds with oxygen.
The wood can be burned in a fire.
According to the information I found, in the laboratory, you can get 8660 BTU/lb out of wood because you can make it completely dry. However, moisture in the wood affects its energy output because energy is wasted to heat and expel the water content. They say that the realistic energy output of wood is closer to 6050 BTU/lb. 6050 BTU/lb = 6383 kilojoules/lb
Wood and coal fire :)
Yes, the input of a lightning strike cause fire spread depending on what sort of material such as wood
What burns in a wood fire is the gas inside the wood, and the heat breaks down particles in the wood, causing the bonds that were broken to release energy and the entire compound then combusted.
The transformations that you describe are quite common. Fire does this. Chemical energy in (for example) wood, transforms into heat when you burn the wood, and when you get enough heat, you will then also get light; in a fire, you get a glowing, very hot gas called plasma.
The transformations that you describe are quite common. Fire does this. Chemical energy in (for example) wood, transforms into heat when you burn the wood, and when you get enough heat, you will then also get light; in a fire, you get a glowing, very hot gas called plasma.
wood catches on fire because of all the carbon and hydrogen stored inside. there is also the energy from soaking in the sun and absorbing it's radiation.