Combustion is a chemical reaction between oxygen and other substances that creates heat and sometimes light. Incineration is the process of burning something completely and usually involves combustion.
differentiate rapid combustion to spontaneous combustion
There is no difference. They both refer to the product that leaves a furnace post combustion
combustion is purely a chemical reaction, need not to be natural while explosion is naturally chemical energy. explosion requires expansion of volume while this is not necessary in case of combustion.
The purpose of using an incinerator is to treat waste, this process usually requires combustion of substances that are found in the waste. This waste process can only be made in an incinerator.
The meaning of diluted is low concentration of a solute; incineration is burning.
Walter R Niessen has written: 'Combustion and incineration processes' -- subject(s): Combustion, Incineration
D. P. Y. Chang has written: 'Spray combustion studies of surrogate hazardous waste incineration' -- subject(s): Combustion, Hazardous wastes, Incineration
Ravi K. Srivastava has written: 'Controlling So2 Emissions' 'The role of rogue droplet combustion in hazardous waste incineration' -- subject(s): Combustion, Hazardous wastes, Incineration
differentiate rapid combustion to spontaneous combustion
waste incineration
Respiration is breathing Combustion is burning
As with incineration, pyrolysis, gasification and plasma treatment of waste are thermal processes in which waste is exposed to high temperatures. However, the essential difference between combustion and pyrolysis technologies (MATRIX, gasification, plasma treatment) is that no oxygen is used during the pyrolysis at all, and therefore no oxidation takes place: substances are not burnt but rather "melted".
what is the purpose of refractory lining in furnace
The main difference between a diesel and a steam engine is the diesel engine is an internal combustion and the steam engine is external combustion.
All types of combustions are oxidation reactions.