Environmental Consequences of Emission Control Devices
Failure to use Emission Control Devices
The production of coal energy largely consists of hydrogen and carbon. The combustion process is a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air. The carbon mixes with oxygen to create carbon dioxide (CO2) while the oxygen mixes with hydrogen to produce water vapor (H2O). The two chemical reactions release a considerable volume of energy as heat. Because the coal plants need heat to instigate these chemical reactions, it results in a chain reaction. Ideally, the two chemical reactions cause heat, and the heat causes other reactions in the chamber and the environment. Once the process begins, it continues until all the coal has been burned. The reason for this is to obtain energy, in the form of heat (Hester & Harrison, 2004).
The issue is that burning coal produces CO2 that increases the supply already in the environment. Lack of emission control technologies will lead to an increased greenhouse effect and consequently increase the Earth's temperature. Coal plants are the leading sources of CO2 emissions, if emission control devices are not used, the coal plants can be linked to climate change. Atmospheric CO2 traps the heat radiating from the earth's surface and admits...
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