A. Sewage gas
B. Refinery gas
C. Producer gas
D. Bagasse
Related Mcqs:
- Theoretical flame temperature of a fuel is that temperature which is attained, when the fuel is completely burnt ‘using theoretical amount of air in___________________?
A. Air
B. Oxygen
C. Either A. or B.
D. Either A. or B. without gain or loss of heat - Gasification of the solid fuel converts its organic part into combustible by interaction with air/oxygen and steam so as to obtain a secondary gaseous fuel of high calorific value having no ash. Gasification reactions are normally carried out at about _____________ °C?
A. 400-500
B. 900-1000
C. 1400-1500
D. 1700-1800 - For which pair of the fuel gases, calorific value (C.V.) of one fuel is almost double that of the other on volume basis (i.e., kcal/Nm3), while the C.V. is same on weight basis (i.e., kcal/kg) ?
A. Propane and acetylene
B. Propane and LPG
C. Sewage gas and gobar gas
D. B.F. gas and coke oven gas - For the case of a fuel gas undergoing combustion with air, if the air/fuel ratio is increased, the adiabatic flame temperature will_____________________?
A. Increase
B. Decrease
C. Increase or decrease depending on the fuel type
D. Not change - Which of the following will generate maximum volume of product of complete combustion (Nm3/Nm3 of fuel) ?
A. Carburetted water gas
B. Blast furnace gas
C. Natural gas
D. Producers’ gas - Which of the following is not a by-product fuel ?
A. Pitch
B. Blast furnace gas
C. Petrol
D. Refinery gas - Which of the following is unsuitable fuel for producer gas manufacture ?
A. Coke
B. Anthracite
C. Coal having low fusion point of its ash
D. Coal having high fusion point of its ash - Which of the following fuel gases is heavier than air ?
A. Blast furnace gas
B. Coke oven gas
C. Natural gas
D. Water gas - Which of the following is a primary fuel ?
A. Blast furnace coke
B. Gasoline
C. Natural gas
D. Wood charcoal - Which of the following fuel gases will require maximum amount of air for combustion of 1 Nm3 gas ?
A. Blast furnace gas
B. Natural gas
C. Producer gas
D. Water gas