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.
carbon dioxide why does fuel produce carbon dioxide when it burns
No, but yes. It is released in a vapor form that won't work as gas, but still has the chemical properties of gas.
carbon dioxide
carbon dioxide and water
Whether air or oxygen is limiting or present in excess
coal is a fossil fuel that burns without giving water vapour.
Water vapour.
greenhouse gases
Calcium oxide- known as quicklime.
carbon dioxide, CO2
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide and water.
Carbon dioxide
When a fuel burns, it undergoes a combustion reaction. Combustion has two main products. These products are water and carbon dioxide.
water
carbon dioxide
This actually depends on the type of fuel, but often, water vapor, pollutants and energy.
Whether air or oxygen is limiting or present in excess
It depends on whats burning, but I would say Carbon Dioxide... Please correct me if wrong
Carbon monoxide and methane
Water is produced when the fuel burns in the engine. The carbon in the fuel burns with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, while hydrogen in the fuel burns with more oxygen to form water. You only see it dripping out when the exhaust pipe is cold, because after it's warmed up the water comes out as steam and is invisible.