By burning it. The heat it lets off will be energy.
No only make fires
Wood, coal, etc.
The chemical energy in the wood that allows it to burn is transferred to heat, light, and sound energy.
Yes, energy is stored in wood in the form of chemical energy. When wood is burned, this energy is released in the form of heat and light.
See, I don't exactly know if this is correct or not. The suns energy is mechanical energy and it shines down on some wood and starts heating it up. the wood starts burning and that is chemical energy. Check with someone else to make sure it is correct.
Burning wood produces heat energy and light energy. The chemical energy stored in the wood is converted to thermal energy and radiant energy during the combustion process.
According to the information I found, in the laboratory, you can get 8660 BTU/lb out of wood because you can make it completely dry. However, moisture in the wood affects its energy output because energy is wasted to heat and expel the water content. They say that the realistic energy output of wood is closer to 6050 BTU/lb. 6050 BTU/lb = 6383 kilojoules/lb
It is the breaking of chemical bonds, and therefore is releasing chemical energy.
When a piece of wood is burned, the potential energy stored in the wood is converted into thermal energy (heat) and light energy (flame). This process is an example of chemical energy (stored in the wood) being transformed into thermal and light energy.
Burning wood releases chemical energy stored in the wood as potential energy during photosynthesis. This chemical energy is converted into thermal energy and light energy during combustion.
Energy cannot be created. (Or destroyed) Burning changes the chemical energy of the wood to heat energy and light energy.
Well the energy transformation that takes place when wood is burned is CHEMICAL ENERGY---> THERMAL ENERGY.