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No. You must not confuse the PROCESS of converting some chemical products to others, with the RESULT. The PROCESS of converting wood and oxygen to smoke is a chemical change. The SMOKE itself is not.
Particulate Matter.....
Char or charcoal is the remaining portion of the wood material that contains unburnable minerals and pure carbon. Charcoal fire emits no smoke as it is the residue of the wood as carbon without the gases
It is oxidation as the wood combines with air.
The reaction of the wood burning is Oxidation as wood combines with air, the type of change that is occurring is a chemical change.
It gives it wood that lasts for at least 24 hours if not treated with antibiotics within 1 minute after wood develops. :P
Wet wood, vegetation, and plastics will make a thick, dark smoke that should not be breathed in. Dry wood and dead leaves make a thinner, grayish smoke.
Gas heating does not produce any "smoke" at all. Wood burning, however, produces smoke which is much more toxic than tobacco secondhand smoke. It is best to completely avoid wood heating.
Cedar wood
Wood smoke is much worse than tobacco second hand smoke. Wood smoke contains more than twelve times as many carcinogenic compounds, and is chemically active up to forty times longer in the lungs than tobacco.
itz gold ..
Sorghum is not a wood, it is a grass.
rhambutan wood
Because it is easier to obtain complete combustion of gas, producing nothing but CO2 & H2O, 1) safe biproducts, and 2) the maiximum amount of heat, whereas burning kerosene and wood often produce incomplete combustion leaving soot and carbon monoxide.
yes she does
no
Yes.