The general term is "fuel". Specific examples include wood, coal, gasoline, etc.
oil or coal
Any type of material that stores energy and can be burnt to to supply heat is called fuel.e.g wood,coal,petrol etc
Hydrocarbons (and the similarly hydroxl-based alcohols) can be burned to release heat. The energy is stored as carbon bonds that can be broken by oxidation (burning). But any combination of oxygen with a free radical, or a pure metal, can also release heat.
It depends on the amount of material (its mass), on how much heat energy is added, and on the material's heat capacity.
It is the heat energy
oil or coal
oil or coal
Any type of material that stores energy and can be burnt to to supply heat is called fuel.e.g wood,coal,petrol etc
the coal is designed to absorb heat at when heat hits it it stores that heat ++++ No. The energy is stored by coal simply being a combustible material, so it contains potential chemical energy.
A battery stores chemical energy which can be converted to electrical energy on demand. Any fuel (gasoline, wood,fuel oil, etc) stores chemical energy which is released as heat when burned.
heat energy
heat energy.
Hydrocarbons (and the similarly hydroxl-based alcohols) can be burned to release heat. The energy is stored as carbon bonds that can be broken by oxidation (burning). But any combination of oxygen with a free radical, or a pure metal, can also release heat.
The energy that is contained in a consumable fuel (like gasoline) is chemical energy. The energy that it is converted into when it is burned is heat energy.
It depends on the amount of material (its mass), on how much heat energy is added, and on the material's heat capacity.
Many substances can be burned to release heat energy, pretty much anything. However, water or ice is one that can not.
Hi, when fuel is burned, energy in the form of heat is given off. hope this helps