The gases that are produced while burning leaves are
1) Carbon Dioxide
2) Carbon Monoxide
Both carbon dioxide and water are produced as gases when paraffin is burned, but of these two, only the carbon dioxide is still a gas when it equilibrates to standard temperature and pressure.
The four most common gases in a house fire are carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and nitrogen. These gases are produced as various materials in the house burn and release their components into the air during a fire.
The vapors produced when materials burn are a mixture of gases and particulates released during combustion. These vapors can include carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor, and other byproducts depending on the material being burned. Incomplete combustion can produce toxic gases that are harmful to health and the environment.
Yes, green leaves can burn if exposed to high enough temperatures. While green leaves have a higher moisture content compared to dry leaves, prolonged exposure to heat can cause them to dry out and eventually catch fire.
Flammable gas refers to gases that can ignite and burn when exposed to a flame or spark. Toxic gas, on the other hand, refers to gases that can be harmful or even lethal if inhaled or absorbed into the body. Essentially, flammable gases pose a fire hazard, while toxic gases pose a health hazard.
Water can not be produced by mixing these to gases, when hydrogen gas is burn in oxygen atmosphere the vapours of water are produced.
Only when you burn them
Both carbon dioxide and water are produced as gases when paraffin is burned, but of these two, only the carbon dioxide is still a gas when it equilibrates to standard temperature and pressure.
The four most common gases in a house fire are carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and nitrogen. These gases are produced as various materials in the house burn and release their components into the air during a fire.
no!
The vapors produced when materials burn are a mixture of gases and particulates released during combustion. These vapors can include carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor, and other byproducts depending on the material being burned. Incomplete combustion can produce toxic gases that are harmful to health and the environment.
Flammable gas refers to any gas that can ignite and burn easily under normal conditions, while combustible gas is a subset of flammable gas and refers specifically to gases that can ignite and burn in the presence of oxygen. In other words, all combustible gases are flammable, but not all flammable gases are necessarily combustible.
Yes, green leaves can burn if exposed to high enough temperatures. While green leaves have a higher moisture content compared to dry leaves, prolonged exposure to heat can cause them to dry out and eventually catch fire.
because paper is made of leaves and leaves are flammable
CO2 does not help other gasses burn
Objects like meteors, spacecraft upon re-entry, and volatile gases can burn up in Earth's atmosphere due to the intense heat and friction produced as they travel through the air at high speeds.
Mercury has no atmosphere. Cosmic rays from the sun burn the gases off.