I'm actually quite confused about this one, does it even have a boiling point??
and there are different types of fossil fuel.... so i'm not really sure,,,
it can be any kind of boiling point,,, jst anything will do :D
the teacher can't blame me for what she didn't write on the assignment sheet right? XD
and there are different types of fossil fuel.... so i'm not really sure,,,
it can be any kind of boiling point,,, jst anything will do :D
the teacher can't blame me for what she didn't write on the assignment sheet right? XD
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There are three main types of fossil fuel:
Gases: typically C1 to C3 alkanes - boiling point below - 40°C
Liquids - either recovered as crude oil or refined into lighter fractions - boiling point over a wide range, but possibly ranging from below 100°C to 200°C ( these are very approximate )
Solids - such as coal - which cannot be said to have a boiling point.
Gases: typically C1 to C3 alkanes - boiling point below - 40°C
Liquids - either recovered as crude oil or refined into lighter fractions - boiling point over a wide range, but possibly ranging from below 100°C to 200°C ( these are very approximate )
Solids - such as coal - which cannot be said to have a boiling point.
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It depends on the fossil fuel i suppose. i never really thought. theres lots of different fossil fuels, gas, oil, coal, peat, wood, ect. i assume by the time their at a high enough temp to boil there would be nothing left to boil anyway because it would burn away to nothing, but everything has a boiling point. whatever you take out of the earth to burn are fossil fuels like coal take hundreds of millions of years to reproduce. wood will reproduce in about 30 years. the others apart from wood take so long to reproduce that they are concidered non renewable