carbon dioxide, CO2
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide
carbon dioxide
When a fuel burns, it undergoes a combustion reaction. Combustion has two main products. These products are water and carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide(co2) BUT... if there must me not enough oxygen then the produced gas is carbon monoxide(co)
It depends on the fuel and how well it burns. For example, methane, ethane, propane, butane, petrol, ethanol, sugar, etc. will give water & carbon dioxide if burnt fully; however, imperfect burning can produce carbon monoxide or carbon. Burning hydrogen, on the other hand, produces water.
The answer is: carbon monoxide
carbon dioxide
The main product is carbon dioxide. Aproximatlely 3 kg of carbon dioxide is produced by burning 1 kg of fossil fuel. The extra mass is from the oxygen taken from the atmosphere during burning.
Carbon Dioxide of course!
The energy comes from the gas which is usually a hydrocarbon fuel. The fuel produces heat energy when it burns with oxygen in the air. The burning process releases chemical potential energy in the carbon. Carbon dioxide is produced and the carbon-oxygen chemical bonds in the carbon dioxide release heat when they are formed. Most of the carbon in the gas was originally taken from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by the action of plants. With the Sun's heat the plants separated out the carbon and oxygen, which resulted in stored energy, and that is the energy that runs the gas stove.
Any carbon-contaning fuel can produce carbon monoxide when burned; gasoline, natural gas, diesel, wood, and paper are common ones.