No, halogens are not the basis of all fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are primarily made up of hydrocarbons, which are compounds of hydrogen and carbon. Halogens, like chlorine and fluorine, are not typically found in significant amounts in fossil fuels.
If you mean the use of fossil fuels, yes. Typically, the fuels are burned (for example, in a car engine), converting the chemical energy into heat. Part of this is then converted into movement. A heat engine can only convert part of the heat energy into useful energy, so the remainder is wasted.
False. Atoms of halogens, such as chlorine and fluorine, do form chemical bonds with other elements to achieve a stable electron configuration. Halogens are highly reactive and tend to form bonds with other elements to complete their outer electron shell.
True. Combustion is indeed the process of burning fuels, during which a fuel reacts with an oxidizing agent to produce heat, light, and other byproducts.
Yes.Energy, being energy can be converted from one form to another for storage.
halogens
Fossil fuels are clean burning and will not be bad for the environment. We will never run out of fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are good for our health. These are a few that are not true about fossil fuels.
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Yes, that's where it is usually believed that fossil fuels come from - and that's why they are called "fossil" in the first place.
extracting energy from nuclear fuels is more expensive than extracting energy from fossil fuels
True. Burning fossil fuels releases harmful pollutants such as carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides into the environment, contributing to air and water pollution, as well as climate change.
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Fossil fuel energy is from the sun originally that is true. But they are certainly not inexhaustible.
True. Fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, and natural gas, are nonrenewable resources because they are finite and take millions of years to form. Once they are used up, they cannot be replaced within a human lifespan.