Chemistry! The actions of the engine emissions and the exhaust system all work together to change the emissions from bad emissions to good emissions, if sulfur smell is considered good! The burnt fuel is mixed and remixed in the engine to ensure a good burn of the fuel. The resultant pollutant is then passed through the exhaust catalytic converter and its chemistry is changed to a less pollutant chemical. All the chemistry terms mean a lot to the designers and the EPA but to most of us it takes a large amount of equipment we cant afford to check the emissions amounts. Our best check is the smell. When we smell the sulpher it just means the car is doing what its supposed to do. If you want the chemistry specifics there are loads of papers on the subject. Just do a search for CAR EMISSIONS. They should fill your nights with reading material and all types of letters and numbers to impress your friends.
Sulfur does not have a smell in its pure solid or liquid form. The characteristic smell of rotten eggs is due to hydrogen sulfide gas, which is released when sulfur compounds decompose.
Yes, sulfur has a strong and unpleasant smell often described as rotten eggs.
The rotten egg smell is sulfur...
Sulfur is the component in gunpowder that produces a smell similar to rotten eggs when it is burned.
Farts contain small amounts of sulfur, which can create a rotten egg smell. Sulfur itself has a distinct smell similar to rotten eggs, and this association may be why we describe the smell of farts as having a sulfur-like odor.
Sulfur is the element that is yellow and can have a distinct unpleasant smell, reminiscent of rotten eggs.
Yes, sulfur has a distinct smell often described as rotten eggs or a strong, pungent odor.
Yes, sulfur has a strong and unpleasant smell often described as rotten eggs.
Volcanoes often contain sulfur, an element that can smell like rotten eggs.
It has a high sulfur content to it.
Hydrogen Sulfide is what smells like rotten eggs. Sulfur is best described as the smell a strike match gives off. Light and match and smell. That's sulfur.
Yes, sulfur has a distinctive smell often described as rotten eggs or a strong, unpleasant odor. This smell is due to sulfur compounds like hydrogen sulfide.