No. Wood that is heated in the absense of oxygen will chemically break down into simpler substances.
None. Wood does not turn liquid or gas- it burns.
It burns because it's made up of fibrous tissue from organic material. Natural elements melt, like all metals, not plants.
Many materials such as plastic melt and some materials burn such as wood
Everything can conduct heat except a vacuum. Lithium is a metal so it should do better than most.
it melts faster on a metal surface.Ice absorbs heat from metal faster than it absorbs it from wood. Wood is an insulator. It slows down the transfer of heat to the ice. Metal is a conductor. It absorbs heat readily, and passes it on quickly.
Yes. Anything can melt IF you apply the necessary heat IN A VACUUM. The vacuum prevents combustion and therefore burning from fire.
Wood doesn't melt.
unless the wood is hot/warm, it most likely not melt the ice.
You cannot melt wood, You cannot burn silver, within the above.
sodium chloride
it is because wood is hard and will never melt so the answer is no
yes
Salt makes Ice Melt Faster
First of all, wood can be broken down into three elements: carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. To create fire you need heat, fuel and oxygen. By providing the wood you have fuel and since it contains oxygen, you have that as well. By raising the heat of it enough, even in a vacuum you are eventually going to cause it to spontaneously combust before any of those elements melt. So in short wood cannot melt before it starts burning.
None. Wood does not turn liquid or gas- it burns.
A hot glue gun can not melt a pencil cause a pencil is wood!
There is no way too know