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  2. Kerosene heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerosene_heater

    Kerosene heaters should not be left unattended, especially when sleeping. A kerosene heater, as any heater that uses organic fuel, can produce dangerously high amounts of soot and carbon monoxide when running out of oxygen. Failure to follow safety precautions could result in asphyxiation or carbon monoxide poisoning.

  3. Gasoline heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasoline_heater

    Gasoline heaters require an intake source of fresh air, and exhaust combusted gasses. Due to the toxicity of the latter - carbon monoxide in particular - it is crucial to prevent spent gasses from entering a vehicle's interior. Other combustion byproducts include soot, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, and some carbon monoxide.

  4. History of manufactured fuel gases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_manufactured...

    But storage in air-entrained confined spaces was not highly looked upon either, as residual heat removal would be difficult, and fighting a fire if it was started could result in the formation of highly toxic carbon monoxide through the water-gas reaction, caused by allowing water to pass over extremely hot carbon (H 2 O + C = H 2 + CO), which ...

  5. The Best Place to Put a Carbon Monoxide Detector (and 5 ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-place-put-carbon-monoxide...

    We also recommend installing additional carbon monoxide detectors about five to 20 feet from any sources of CO gas, like the furnace, water heater, or fireplace.

  6. Ondol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ondol

    With the traditional ondol heating, the floor closer to the furnace was normally warm enough, and the warmest spots reserved for elders and honored guests. Ondol had problems such as environmental pollution and carbon monoxide poisoning resulting from burning coal briquettes. [6] Thus, other technology heats modern Korean homes.

  7. Hot blast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_blast

    This is known as regenerative heating. Hot blast was invented and patented for iron furnaces by James Beaumont Neilson in 1828 at Wilsontown Ironworks [citation needed] in Scotland, but was later applied in other contexts, including late bloomeries. Later the carbon monoxide in the flue gas was burned to provide additional heat.

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