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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

fuel material that can be burned or otherwise consumed to produce heat. The common fuels used in industry, transportation, and the home are burned in air. The carbon and hydrogen in fuel rapidly combine with oxygen in the air in an exothermal reaction—one that liberates heat. Most of the fuels used by industrialized nations are in the form of incompletely oxidized and decayed animal and vegetable materials, or fossil fuels, specifically coal , peat , lignite , petroleum , and natural gas . From these natural fuels other artificial ones can be derived. Coal gas , coke , water gas , and producer gas can be made using coal as the principal ingredient. Gasoline , kerosene , and fuel oil are made from petroleum. For most transportation, fuel must be in a liquid form.

There is a growing concern about the environmental contamination caused by the burning of great amounts of fossil fuels and about the increasing expense of finding them and processing them into easily usable forms (see energy, sources of ). During the last 100 years the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased, and there is evidence that this phenomenon may be due to the burning of fossil fuel. Use of biomass, which consists of plants or plant waste, would not produce excess carbon dioxide because the plants absorb the gas for their growth. Wood is not as concentrated a form of energy as fossil fuels, but it can be converted into a more energy-rich fuel called charcoal . Burning fossil fuel also releases acidic oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, which are deposited on the earth in rainwater (see acid rain ). The clearing of forests , particularly in the tropical regions, also threatens to increase the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere because the forests utilize carbon dioxide for growth.

The amount of fossil fuel available is limited and new methods of recovery are being developed. One proposed alternative fuel is hydrogen, which is now employed as a fuel only for a few special purposes because of its high cost. Hydrogen can be produced by electrolysis of water for which nonfossil fuels would supply the energy. Solar energy could be utilized either by direct conversion to electricity using photovoltaic cells or by trapping solar heat. Fuels are rated according to the amount of heat (in calories or Btu) they can produce. Nuclear fuels are also possible substitutes for fossil fuels. Nuclear fuels are not burned; they undergo reactions in which the nuclei of their atoms either split apart, i.e., undergo fission, or combine with other nuclei, i.e., undergo fusion. In either case, a small part of the nuclear mass is converted to heat energy. All nuclear fuels currently employed in practical, nonweapons applications react by fission.

High-energy fuels for jet engines and rockets are rated by their specific impulse in thrust per pound of propellant per second. Hydrogen, which is the lightest element, is usually used in the form of compounds, because the density of liquid hydrogen is low and therefore a large volume is required. Addition of aluminum powder or lithium increases the efficiency. Rockets usually have a self-contained supply of oxygen or some other oxidizer, such as ammonium, lithium, or potassium perchlorate. Fuels such as turpentine, alcohol, aniline, and ammonia use nitric acid, hydrogen peroxide, and liquid oxygen as oxidizers. More power can be obtained by oxidizing hydrazine, diborane, or hydrogen with oxygen, ozone, or fluorine.

See oil gas ; liquefied petroleum gas ; gas, fuel ; nuclear energy .

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fuel

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

fuel Substance that is burned or otherwise modified to produce energy, usually in the form of heat. Apart from fossil hydrocarbons (coal, oil and gas) and firewood and charcoal, the term also applies to radioactive materials used in nuclear power stations. See also fossil fuels

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fuel

The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2009 | © The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2009, originally published by Oxford University Press 2009. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

fu·el / ˈfyoōəl/ • n. material such as coal, gas, or oil that is burned to produce heat or power. ∎  short for nuclear fuel. ∎  food, drink, or drugs as a source of energy: any protein intake can also be used as fuel. ∎  a thing that sustains or inflames passion, argument, or other emotion or activity: the remuneration packages will add fuel to the debate about top-level rewards. • v. (fu·eled , fu·el·ing ; Brit. fu·elled, fu·el·ling) [tr.] 1. supply or power (an industrial plant, vehicle, or machine) with fuel: the plan includes a hydroelectric plant to fuel a paper factory | fig. a big novel that is fueled by anger and revenge. ∎  fill up (a vehicle, aircraft, or ship) with oil or gasoline. ∎  [intr.] (fuel up) (of a person) eat a meal: arrive straight from work and fuel up on the complimentary buffet. 2. cause (a fire) to burn more intensely. ∎  sustain or inflame (a feeling or activity): his rascal heart and private pain fuel his passion as an actor. PHRASES: add fuel to the fire (or flames) fig. cause a situation or conflict to become more intense, esp. by provocative comments. ORIGIN: Middle English: from Old French fouaille, based on Latin focus ‘hearth’ (in late Latin ‘fire’).

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