Ammonia, hydrogen sulphide, carbon dioxide and methane
Slurry can be dangerous because it emits toxic gases like hydrogen sulfide, can cause asphyxiation in poorly ventilated areas, and poses a risk of drowning if someone falls into a slurry pit. Additionally, contact with slurry can lead to skin irritation or chemical burns due to its caustic nature.
It is a pit used on farms to gather animal waste and unusable hay and slowly (and smellily) convert it into a noxious fertiliser (it's also toxic), which is then spread on fields.
Slurry in biogas refers to the mixture of organic materials such as manure, food waste, or crop residues that are used as feedstock in anaerobic digesters to produce biogas through a fermentation process. It is a rich source of nutrients for methane-producing microorganisms.
To burn the fumes produced in the crankcase for cleaner emissions. In the old days the crankcase fumes were released in to the atmosphere.
A mixture of sodium ethanoate, water and cardon dioxide is going to be produced. Carbon dioxide can be harmful so I'd recommend not inhaling the fumes produced
Sludge is a generic term for a semi-solid slurry. It depends on the composition of the sludge as to what gasses may be produced.
White fumes are produced when ethanol reacts with phosphorus pentachloride because the reaction generates phosphorus trichloride gas. This gas reacts with water vapor in the air to produce hydrochloric acid, which then reacts with residual ethanol to form small hydrocarbon compounds that appear as white fumes.
A slurry pump is a type of centrifugal pump, used for pumping liquid with solids. The main pump parts are, impeller, liner, casing, base and bearing assembly. For now there are horizontal slurry pump, vertical slurry pump and submersible slurry pump, every type has its condition in the industry, but all used for slurry pumping.
No, cat urine fumes do not release carbon monoxide fumes. Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless gas produced by the incomplete burning of carbon-based fuels. Cat urine may produce ammonia fumes, but not carbon monoxide.
washing the mined phosphate with a hydraulic jet and then pumping it in liquefied "slurry" form to a washing plant. The phosphate was then mechanically graded by size, concentrated, and dried
No, they do not. No explosive fumes are produced.
Hat makers became crazy from the fumes produced by mercury-soaked felt.