A spark of energy is required to initiate the chemical reaction of burning a fossil fuel because it provides the activation energy needed to break the bonds in the molecules of the fuel. Another name for this spark of energy is the ignition energy.
Burning anything (a liquid or a solid) is a chemical change and the reaction is known as a combustion reaction.
It is a chemical reaction. The coal (which is mostly carbon) reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide.
The burning of gasoline is a chemical change because it involves a reaction with oxygen from the air to produce carbon dioxide, water vapor, and energy. This process cannot be easily reversed to recover the original gasoline molecules.
Burning is an oxidation reaction - a reaction with oxygen.
This is a chemical change, like any other burning reaction: magnesium is turned into magnesium oxide by burning reaction with oxygen (from air). 2Mg + O2 --> 2MgO
Burning wood is a chemical reaction because combustion (burning) is an oxidation reaction.
Burning is an oxydation reaction.
Burning is a chemical reaction (oxidation).
Yes, burning of fuel is always a chemical reaction.
Yes, burning anything is chemical.
Burning is a sign of a chemical change
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chemical
Burning
The burning of a wooden stick is a chemical process.
Check your spelling- think you mean methane. Burning (combustion) of ANYTHING is a chemical reaction.
Gasoline burning is an oxidation reaction, a reaction with oxygen.So, burning is a chemical change. And fire was the most important discovery of human beings.