Sulfur is removed from fossil fuels through a process called desulfurization. This can involve methods like hydrodesulfurization, which uses hydrogen to convert sulfur compounds into hydrogen sulfide, which can then be captured and removed. Alternatively, flue gas desulfurization can be used to remove sulfur dioxide from the emissions produced when fossil fuels are burned.
No, sulfur is not a fossil fuel. Fossil fuels are coal, oil, and natural gas that are derived from the remains of ancient plants and animals. Sulfur is a naturally occurring element that can be found in various minerals and is not considered a fuel source.
Sulfur is the element present in impurities in fossil fuels that can produce sulfur dioxide when the fuel burns.
Natural gas releases no sulfur when burned, making it a cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels like coal and oil.
By definition raw fossil fuels are not required to be purely composed of hydrocarbons. A hydrocarbon is by definition, just hydrogen and carbon; however in fossil fuels impurities are present that are often removed in refining. Some forms of fossil fuels have little or no hydrogen present (Coal for example is nearly all Carbon). It is not uncommon to find oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and other mineral and chemical components in a fossil fuel outside of pure hydrocarbons. Refineries are designed to take raw fossil fuels (oil for example) and adjust those various components to meet some requirement. A good example is in gasoline and diesel fuels where octane, heptane, butane and sulfur levels can be controlled.
Sulfur found in fossil fuels can form sulfur dioxide when burned, which can combine with water in the air to form sulfuric acid. This can contribute to acid rain, which can harm the environment and ecosystems.
No, sulfur is not a fossil fuel. Fossil fuels are coal, oil, and natural gas that are derived from the remains of ancient plants and animals. Sulfur is a naturally occurring element that can be found in various minerals and is not considered a fuel source.
Sulfur is the element present in impurities in fossil fuels that can produce sulfur dioxide when the fuel burns.
Sweet natural as has essentially no sulphur.
Natural gas releases no sulfur when burned, making it a cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels like coal and oil.
sulfur, hopes this helps someone.
sulfur, hopes this helps someone.
Pentane is an alkane which has been removed from crude oil by fractional distillation and it's crude oil that's the fossil fuel.
Fossil fuel combustion releases pollutants such as carbon dioxide (CO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), particulate matter, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). These pollutants contribute to air pollution, smog formation, acid rain, and climate change.
If the fuel is coal, you simply have to switch to a coal with a lower sulfur content. You can remove the SOx from the flue gas with ammonia scrubbing. If the fuel is fuel oil a lower sulfur fuel oil can be used. Otherwise the oil must be treated in a hydrodesulfurization unit which is probably not economical due to the hydrogen required. If the fuel is natural gas, sulfur can be absorbed by absorption with a sulfur free amine such as MDEA (monodiethanolamine). The sulfur is later removed from the amine during the amine regeneration process which results in a sulfur rich stream.
By definition raw fossil fuels are not required to be purely composed of hydrocarbons. A hydrocarbon is by definition, just hydrogen and carbon; however in fossil fuels impurities are present that are often removed in refining. Some forms of fossil fuels have little or no hydrogen present (Coal for example is nearly all Carbon). It is not uncommon to find oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and other mineral and chemical components in a fossil fuel outside of pure hydrocarbons. Refineries are designed to take raw fossil fuels (oil for example) and adjust those various components to meet some requirement. A good example is in gasoline and diesel fuels where octane, heptane, butane and sulfur levels can be controlled.
All fossil fuels contain complex hydrocarbon chains comprised of hydrogen, carbon and oxygen. They also may contain nitrogen, sulfur, moisture, and noncombustible minerals.
Sulfur found in fossil fuels can form sulfur dioxide when burned, which can combine with water in the air to form sulfuric acid. This can contribute to acid rain, which can harm the environment and ecosystems.