Modern furnaces mount oxygen-fuel burners in the sidewall and use them to provide chemical energy to the cold-spots, making the heating of the steel more uniform.
12.
The idea is that algae could someday be used to absorb emissions belched from factories, cars and other fossil fuel burners believed responsible for global warming.
13.
Although such convenient and self-regulating liquid fuel burners were also used on steam launches, most launches at the time of the naphtha engine's heyday were still using solid fuel.
14.
Steam was supplied from four Yarrow & Co . coal-fired boilers with tangentially fired tilting pulverized fuel burners, with 3no type LM13 table mills made by ICL of Derby.
15.
Starbuck said the failure of the upper-stage Centaur liquid-fuel burner had left the satellite launched Friday stranded in a lopsided orbit thousands of miles below its intended 22, 300-mile altitude.
16.
Whereas fossil-fuel burners emit oxides of carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur . . . there is no intrinsic reason why nuclear systems must emit any pollutant except heat and traces of radioactivity.
17.
Swedish Patent No . 1 was published on June 5, 1885, valid since January 2, 1885, assigned to E . C . Burgess of London, England, for a liquid fuel burner.
18.
Windsor Industrial Dry Cleaning, a small, family-run business, decided to replace its fuel burner with natural gas, which meant it would pick up credits that could be sold on the online exchange.
19.
When built, Eastbourne-based No . A629 was fitted with an experimental pulverised fuel burner of German design; the experiment was terminated when a minor explosion was caused by the powdered coal coming into contact with sparks thrown from the blastpipe.
20.
Additional chemical energy is provided by injecting oxygen and carbon into the furnace; historically this was done through lances ( hollow mild-steel tubes ) in the slag door, now this is mainly done through wall-mounted injection units that combine the oxygen-fuel burners and the oxygen or carbon injection systems into one unit.