No, it is not true.
he, like found it in a suit case with like Zacharaist and stuff
He noticed that there was no change in the total mass of material within the container during combustion.
He didn't. The name "sulfur" was in use for this substance since the days of the Romans. LaVoisier simply showed that sulfur could not be broken down into any constituent parts, and was thus an "element."
If you let hydrogen gas near the flame it will pop. The way we got hydrogen gas is by adding hydrochloric acid to magnesium powder and putting our thumb over the top of the test tube trapping the hydrogen gas then releasing it near the flame of the Bunsen burner.
The fuel in the Bunsen burner is a compound of carbon and hydrogen. The hydrogen combines with the oxygen in air to form water leaving the carbon behind as the black substance.
Lavoisier helped to transform chemistry from a science of observation to the science of measurement that it is today. by doing so, he created a balance that would measure mass to the nearest 0.0005 grams.
Joseph Priestley is generally given credit for the discovery of oxygen, which he named dephlogisticated air'. The term was changed to 'oxygen' in 1777 by Antoine Lavoisier, who is better known for his experiments with gas.
Lavoisier is revered as the father of modern chemistry because of the quantitative measures taken to prove how elements work. Lavoisier's most famous experiment involved oxygen and how it can be used in combustion.
LaVoisier did not invent a "periodic" table, he simply was one of the first to make a scientific list of elements, doing so in 1789 with Traité Élémentaire de Chimie . However, this list was not "periodic" in that he made no attempt to line them up by chemical qualities. When this was done by Mendele'ev about 100 years later, a major breakthrough in chemistry was achieved.
Antoine Lavoisier won a prize for figuring out a way to light the streets of Paris, discovered the role oxygen plays in combustion, and received a bachelor degree in college. He worked in geology and chemistry most of his life, and was involved in the French Revolution. -----I wouldn't say the french revolution was an accomplishment. He was beheaded at the guillotine! However, he did have the basic idea of conservation of mass, which contributed to Einstein's E=mc^2. (but that is in many scientist's *opinion*)
Deric Burner
how do you make the flame on busen burner bigger