Oxygen
You turn the air admittance ring at the base of the Bunsen burner until it is fully open. this allows the hottest flame to be produced and has a blue colour
No, blue is the hottest color on a Bunsen burner flame. The blue color indicates that the gas is burning efficiently and at a high temperature. Yellow in a Bunsen burner flame suggests incomplete combustion and lower temperatures.
Near the tip of a blue flame is the hottest.
The inner blue part of the flame is the hottest on a Bunsen burner, as this is where complete combustion occurs due to the optimal air-to-gas ratio.
because Robert Bunsen made it :)
The hottest flame is the blue flame and the coolest flame is yellow.
The tip of the inner flame is the hottest.
For heating water with a Bunsen burner, you would use a blue flame. This is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame and provides the most efficient heat transfer to the water.
The hottest flame on a Bunsen burner is the blue flame produced when the air and gas mixture is properly adjusted. The blue flame is the hottest because it is well-oxygenated and allows for complete combustion of the gas, resulting in higher temperatures.
The hottest part of the flame on a Bunsen burner is at the tip of the inner blue cone. This part of the flame is where combustion is most complete, resulting in the highest temperature.
The blue flame on a Bunsen burner is the hottest because it is a complete combustion of gas with the right mixture of air. The blue color indicates that the flame has enough oxygen for efficient combustion, resulting in higher temperatures compared to a yellow flame.
It gave him the idea to call it the Bunsen because he invented it and so he decided to put his surname as Bunsen and it is a burner so Bunsen Burner