Almost all fuels produce carbon dioxide when burnt, but only fossil fuels such as oil, coal and natural gas actually add to the amount of carbon dioxide naturally present in the atmosphere.
Fossil fuels
carbon dioxide and water
Pure carbon combusts in an oxygen atmosphere to produce carbon dioxide and heat. C + O2 --> CO2
Combustion
Whenever anything is burnt it gives off carbon dioxide, which is a dangerous greenhouse gas, so yes, lighting fires contributes to global warming. Fire releases greenhouse gases because combustion does: heat+fuel+oxygen=carbon dioxide+(energy)
Any combustion of an organic material produce carbon dioxide and water vapors.
Carbon dioxide is a product of the combustion of fossil fuels and this is contributing most to the accelerated greenhouse effect.
Fossil fuels
Combustion (burning) of any material usually releases carbon dioxide, as carbon is such a major component of everything on earth. Deforestation (removal of trees) means that the trees are no longer able to take carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The greenhouse effect is the greenhouse gases retaining warmth from the sun. Any increase of greenhouse gases (as carbon dioxide is) leads to a warming in the atmosphere.
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide
CO2 or Carbon Dioxide.
Combustion releases carbon dioxide as the carbon in the organic material is joined with oxygen from the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is understood to be a greenhouse gas, meaning it traps heat in the atmosphere.
carbon dioxide and water- CO2+ H2O
carbon dioxide and water
the oxidation/ combustion of wood will produce water and carbon dioxide
Ethers are the compounds of Carbon , Hydrogen and Oxygen so on combustion they produce Carbon dioxide and water vapours.