No
Both nitric acid and hydrochloric acid are highly corrosive. If sprayed on a fire they will boil and cause serious chemical burns. Additionally, nitric acid as an oxidizer and could potentially make a fire even more intense.
Acid rain is basically flaming balls of fire, so I know this because I got hit once on the head with acid rain and I had to go to the hospital because my hair burned up and I got burned. So acid rain will set trees on fire. It effects animals because they would die
To extinguish a fire caused by sulfuric acid, use a dry chemical extinguisher or sand to smother the flames. Avoid using water, as it can react with sulfuric acid and cause splattering. Call emergency services for help if the fire is large or uncontrollable.
Acidic acid? That's like saying that a fire is a burning fire. Of course f-cking ACID is ACIDic. Are you trying to talk about citric acid? You didn't exactly specify in your question.
A soda acid fire extinguisher uses water as a carrier of the soda/acid. A television fire is primarily an electrical fire. Adding water to an electrical fire will only complicate the problem by introducing the possibility of shorts and electrocution. bock442
no cuz hcl is corrosive it might relight the fire even more
hydrochloric acid and hydrogen
No, hydrochloric acid is not combustible. It is a strong acid that can react with certain materials, but it does not burn or catch fire.
when there is a fire you go out of the Fire Door.
Fire would typically extinguish in the presence of hydrochloric acid due to the acid's ability to release hydrogen ions, which can displace oxygen and disrupt the combustion process. The acid may also corrode or react with flammable materials in the fire.
Bombardier beetles well kinda but they don't make fire they make fire acid
Ice cold weather. Acid. Fire.