soot or ashes
luminous flames have a bluish to violet color and it means that the system is given enough oxygen for the reaction. Luminous flames will not produce soot. non luminous flames are orange, red, and yellow much like your everyday campfire but this system is not given enough oxygen therefore produce soot.
400-500 kilograms per cubic meter
Answer:Color of a flame depends primarily on its temperature. In the visible spectrum, red is the coolest, blue the warmest. The yellow you see in burning wood is from its lower temperature and the incandescence of fine particles in the flame called soot. The soot is formed because of a lack of oxygen during combustion. Natutral Gas burns at a higer temperature and tends to burn more completely in the environments we use it in, so you see a blue flame and little to no soot.
Wood
There are many things that produce soot. The burning of coal or wood produces soot. In prior years, individuals would hire chimney sweepers to clean the build up of soot from their fireplaces and chimney flutes.
Soot is often produced when burning wood.
soot
. a boat made by joining logs of wood toghter
Yes, there are soot and creosote "cleaner" logs. In my opinion, they do not work as well as cleaning a chimney properly with a chimney brush.
I think you might be talking about soot. Soot is the leftover stuff from when wood or other materials are burnt.
wood, logs, woodlogs, log-wood
soot
soot
Wood contain C, O, H, etc.
No mammals eat logs. However, beavers and porcupines chew on logs to eat the bark and soft fibers between the bark and the wood. Mammals cannot break down the cellulose of wood.
Green logs are used because logs of green wood absorb oxides and other volatile impurities effectively.