Organic materials and organic materials including vegetable oil is made from carbohydrates.
No, cooking with vegetable oil has no benefit to the environment.Using vegetable oil to run your diesel vehicle, on the other hand, does help the environment, because burning vegetable oil (unlike fossil fuel oil) does not add extra carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. (The carbon dioxide released was removed from the atmosphere recently, when the vegetable was grown, part of the carbon cycle.)
No.
The number of carbon atoms in a molecule of fuel oil can vary depending on the specific composition of the oil. However, fuel oil typically contains hydrocarbon molecules with a range of carbon atoms, with common fuels like diesel having around 10-20 carbon atoms per molecule.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
Fuel oil is a complex mixture of hydrocarbons, primarily composed of long-chain alkanes, cycloalkanes, and aromatic compounds. The number of carbon atoms in fuel oil can vary widely depending on its specific composition and grade, but it typically contains between 10 to 30 carbon atoms per molecule. In general, heavier fuel oils have higher carbon content.
The carbon comes from the oil.
Vegetable oil is a lipid, which is a type of fat or oil that is derived from plants. Hydrocarbons are organic compounds made up of hydrogen and carbon atoms, and they are the main components of fossil fuels like gasoline and diesel. Both substances are important in various industrial applications due to their chemical properties.
vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil
Generally speaking, your oils (canola, olive, vegetable, even baby) are covalent or molecular compounds (they mean the same thing.) Most oils are some combination of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and maybe another element or two. Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen are all non-metals, and non-metals bond to each other covalently, which means they share electrons. Ionic compounds, on the other hand, involve a transfer of electrons, and result in the bonding of metals with non-metals (not the case with oil.)
the burning of oil in factories..........
Vegetable oil hardens through a process called hydrogenation, where hydrogen atoms are added to the oil molecules. Factors that contribute to this process include temperature, pressure, and the presence of a catalyst such as nickel.
Bitumen is a complex mixture of hydrocarbons derived from crude oil, so the number of carbon atoms can vary depending on the specific composition of the sample. On average, bitumen molecules contain anywhere from 20 to 40 carbon atoms per molecule.