yes
Burning release water, carbon dioxide and heat.
Carbon dioxide is a compound of Carbon and Oxygen - CO2
In carbondioxide: CH4 + 3 O2 ==> CO2 + 2 H2O
When methane burns, the carbon dioxide and water formed, equal the mass of the methane plus the mass of the oxygen.
Methane burns in oxygen and gets oxidised. Carbon is oxidised to carbon dioxide, hydrogen to water.
No, when oxygen burns, it combines with other elements to form oxides, not carbon dioxide. For example, when oxygen burns hydrocarbons, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
Burning release water, carbon dioxide and heat.
Water is given off when fuels are burnt in oxygen
As fossil fuels are made up of Carbon and Hydrogen. This burns in oxygen (in air) to form Carbon dioxide and Water, so the carbon dioxide is released into the air
Carbon is combined with oxygen forming carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is a compound of Carbon and Oxygen - CO2
Carbon is burned to carbon dioxide, a colorless gas.
Oxygen. Carbon burns to form carbon dioxide, incomplete combustion with insifficient oxygen will produce carbon monoxide.
As fossil fuels are made up of Carbon and Hydrogen. This burns in oxygen (in air) to form Carbon dioxide and Water, so the carbon dioxide is released into the air
Carbon in the form of charcoal or graphite reacts with oxygen in the air to produce carbon dioxide when it burns.
All of them. At a high enough temperature, even diamond will burn, and produce (ridiculously expensive) carbon dioxide.
In carbondioxide: CH4 + 3 O2 ==> CO2 + 2 H2O