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Terms for subject Environment containing fuel | all forms | exact matches only
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animal dung as fuel Excrement from animals that may be dried and burned to generate energy or converted to liquid or gaseous fuels, such as methane, through chemical processeshusdyrgjødsel som drivstoff
desulphurisation of fuel Removal of sulfur from fossil fuels (or removal of sulfur dioxide from combustion fuel gases) to reduce pollutionsvovelfjerning fra brennstoff
diesel fuel Heavy oil residue used as fuel for certain types of diesel enginesdiesel
domestic fuel Fuels obtained from different sources that are used for domestic heatinghusholdningsbrensel
domestic fuel oil Liquid petroleum product used in domestic heatersfyringsolje
fossil fuel The energy-containing materials which were converted over many thousands of years from their original form of trees, plants and other organisms after being buried in the ground. Physical and chemical processes occurred in the Earth's crust that changed them into coal, peat, oil or natural gasfossilt brensel
fuel additive Substance (such as tetraethyl lead) which is added to petrol to prevent knockingbrenselstilsetning
fuel alcohol Alternative source of energy for motor vehicles. It is produced by fermentation of sugar cane by the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiaebrennalkohol
fuel compositionbrennstoffsammensetning
fuel consumption The amount of fuel utilizedbrenselforbruk
fuel oil A liquid product burned to generate heat, exclusive of oils with a flash point below 38°C; includes heating oils, stove oils, furnace oils, bunker fuel oilsbrennolje
fuel tank installation The operating, fuel-storage component of a fuel systembrennstofftankanlegg
fuel wood Wood used for heatingved
motor fuel Any gaseous or liquid flammable fuel that burns in an internal combustion enginemotorbrennstoff
non-polluting fuel Clean fuel that does not release polluting emissions in the environment, such as methaneikke-forurensende brennstoff
nuclear fuel Nuclear fuels are obtained from inorganic minerals extracted by mining. Although they are at least partially consumed when used in nuclear reactors for the production of heat, they differ from fossil fuels in the way they release energy. Burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and gas, is a chemical reaction. Nuclear fuels, such as uranium, are destroyed by a process of spontaneous disintegration, called fission, and prompted by natural radioactivity. If the process is left to occur naturally in uranium-bearing rock, the rate of change is imperceptibly small. In a man-made nuclear reactor the energy-releasing processes of disintegration, which in the natural state happen slowly over thousands of millions of years, are compressed into minutes. The release of energy is harnessed to generate steam which drives electricity generatorskjernebrensel
nuclear fuel element A piece of nuclear fuel which has been formed and coated, and is ready to be placed in a reactor fuel assemblybrennelement
refuse derived fuel Fuel produced from domestic refuse, after glass and metals have been removed from it, by compressing it to form briquettes used to fuel boilersavfallsutvunnet brennstoff