Assuming you mean complete combustion of carbonaceous fuels (methane, propane, gasolines, diesels and other fossil fuels), in the simplest instance methane CH4, the ideal combustion products would be carbon dioxide and water.
CH4 + 2O2 -> CO2 + 2 H2O
Life does not always work the way you want it to and carbon monoxide (CO), carboxylate (CO3-) and other byproducts are frequently produced. The fuels often contain sulfurs, nitrogens and other contaminants as well.
water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide (in incomplete combustion) There's also nitrogen oxides. Really, it depends on what you burn. A sulfur fire, a magnesium fire and a tire fire have radically different combustion products. when combustion occurs it's sometines useful to separate out the byproducts from the main products. For example, when oil is burnt, the main products are carbon dioxide and water. That means the heat energy comes from atomic bonds formed between the carbon and oxygen, and between the hydrogen and more oxygen. Those are main products, while byproducts are things like carbon monoxide, sulpur componds and nitrous oxides. They are unwanted products which can be removed by filtering the fuel and/or the exhaust gas.
Carbon dioxide and water
co2 and nitrogen
It is "clean" because the by-product in the combustion of Natural Gas is water vapor and and carbon dioxide. That is the same products we exhale. That is why it is considered so clean. The main reason is because NG is mainly comprised of methane. Hope this helps! See the link....
In complete combustion, all the reactants will be converted into carbon dioxide and water. In incomplete combustion, some of the reactants will be converted to carbon dioxide, some will become carbon monoxide, and some may not react at all. Quite often incomplete combustion will result in a "sooty" flame.
When a fuel burns, it undergoes a combustion reaction. Combustion has two main products. These products are water and carbon dioxide.
The main products of an incomplete combustion of fossil fuels are still going to be carbon dioxide and water. There will also be some carbon monoxide and a lot of polycyclical aromatic compounds.
That is correct.
That is correct.
water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide (in incomplete combustion) There's also nitrogen oxides. Really, it depends on what you burn. A sulfur fire, a magnesium fire and a tire fire have radically different combustion products. when combustion occurs it's sometines useful to separate out the byproducts from the main products. For example, when oil is burnt, the main products are carbon dioxide and water. That means the heat energy comes from atomic bonds formed between the carbon and oxygen, and between the hydrogen and more oxygen. Those are main products, while byproducts are things like carbon monoxide, sulpur componds and nitrous oxides. They are unwanted products which can be removed by filtering the fuel and/or the exhaust gas.
hydro carbon and oxygen
Burning methane releases only carbon dioxide and water.
Burning methane releases only carbon dioxide and water.
Burning methane releases only carbon dioxide and water.
incomplete combustion of methane may include ethene and ethyne along with carbon, carbon dioxide and water vapours. _________________________________________________________________ steam and CO is formed
Carbon dioxide and water
co2 and nitrogen