Chapter 5: Energy from Combustion
Order ready-to-submit essays. No Plagiarism Guarantee!
Note: All our papers are written from scratch by human writers to ensure authenticity and originality.
These questions cover Chapter 5 – all sections
Check your essay before you submit. See exactly what your professor sees.
See your AI and plagiarism results before your instructor does.Get the exact same report your professor uses. Trusted by 50,000+ students worldwide.
Total point value for this assignment = 50 pts (a combination of completion and correctness)
1. List five fuels.
a. Name at least two properties that these fuels share.
b. Of the fuels you listed, which are fossil fuels or derived from them?
c. Of the fuels you listed, which are renewable?
2. Although coal is an important fuel for producing electricity, it also has drawbacks. Name three of these.
3. Mercury (Hg) is present in trace amounts in coal, ranging from 50–200 ppb.
Ýour Turn 5.19 mentions that 1.5 million tons of coal can be burned by a single power plant.
Using the formula: C135H96O9NS
a. What is the formula mass for this approximation of coal? ( in grams/mole)
b. Calculate tons of mercury in the coal based on the lower (50 ppb) concentrations
4. Name two ways in which all hydrocarbons are alike.
a. Then name two ways in which they differ.
5. Explain why cracking is a necessary part of the refinement of crude oil.
6. Octane ratings measure a fuel’s ability to minimize or prevent engine knocking. Why is this important?
a. A premium gasoline available at most stations has an octane rating of 91. What does this tell you about whether the fuel contains oxygenates?
7. The energy of sunlight can be converted into the potential (chemical) energy of glucose and oxygen.
a. Name the process by which this conversion occurs.
b. Name three fuels whose energy originates in sunlight.
8. What is a biofuel? Give 3 examples
9. Coal– burning power plants are responsible for two thirds of the sulfur dioxide emissions and one fifth of the nitrogen monoxide emissions. Hint: Revisit Chapter 2.
a. Why does burning coal produce SO2?
b. Name another source of SO2 in the atmosphere.
c. Why does burning coal produce nitrogen monoxide?
d. Name two other sources of NO.


