Carbon dioxide and water are the major products of complete combustion of paraffin and other hydrocarbons.
There will be trace amounts of sulphur dioxide as sulphur is present in crude oil, but is removed at the refinery processing of crude oil.
Carbon monoxide will only be present if the room is not adequately ventilated and the combustion is incomplete. Carbon monoxide oxidises to carbon dioxide fairly readily, so will not linger in a room once a dodgy heater is extinguished.
2006-12-02 23:28:47
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answer #1
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answered by JimboBimbo 2
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All of the above chemicals plus plain old carbon, aka soot.
2006-12-05 04:10:35
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answer #2
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answered by cstspeedy 6
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Carbon-dioxide, Sulphur-dioxide, and lots of others.
2006-12-02 23:06:35
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I already answered this as part of one of your earlier questions - don't you bother reading your answers?
2006-12-04 06:30:01
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answer #4
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answered by drjaycat 5
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Carbon monoxide is one.
xxB
2006-12-02 22:56:22
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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CO and H20
2006-12-03 00:45:45
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answer #6
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answered by lykastar 3
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