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The four(4) flame types of Bunsen burner is depending on flow through the throat holes (holes on the side of the Bunsen burner -- not to be confused with the needle valve for gas flow adjustment). 1) air hole closed (Safety flame used for when not in use or lighting). 2) air hole slightly open. 3) air hole half open. 4) air hole almost fully open (this is the roaring blue flame).
I would not use "fully empty" in a sentence because it is redundant and unnecessary. If something is "empty", it's empty. You do not need to say "fully empty" because empty cannot be anything but nothing. There is no further defining words needed.The glass was empty.I carried an empty pitcher.My gas gauge read E for empty.
The epididymis is the are where sperm fully mature as they receive fructose. This is a narrow tube that is tightly coiled.
yes
The ones that make up the pelvis and the skull.
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
The tip of the blue cone is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame.
Take a guess, Blue or Yellow
When the air hole is covered on the Bunsen Burner its oxygen supply is made smaller. This makes the flame turn YELLOW - This is considered to be the safety flame as it is the most visible to the eye and it radiates less heat. When the Bunsen burners air hole is fully open there is a super heated blue flame which is the product of complete combustion. Hope this helped :)
Air hole fully open gives a 'roaring blue flame'
The four(4) flame types of Bunsen burner is depending on flow through the throat holes (holes on the side of the Bunsen burner -- not to be confused with the needle valve for gas flow adjustment). 1) air hole closed (Safety flame used for when not in use or lighting). 2) air hole slightly open. 3) air hole half open. 4) air hole almost fully open (this is the roaring blue flame).
because you have the vents open on the bunsen burner the flame is getting more oxygen, making it hotter. Different flame types of Bunsen burner depending on flow through the throat holes (holes on the side of the Bunsen burner -- not to be confused with the needle valve for gas flow adjustment). 1) air hole closed (Safety flame used for when not in use or lighting). 2) air hole slightly open. 3) air hole half open. 4) air hole almost fully open (this is the roaring blue flame).
Oxygen
When the hole of a Bunsen burner is half closed (or half open) the flame is mostly blue-violet in color throughout, with no orange/yellow apparent as it would be with the hole fully closed. When the hole is fully open, the flame divides into a pale voilet color outer part with a cone of intense blue color within.
Because depending on the amount of air , depends on how clear the flame is If you close the hole up fully, the flame will show this is because there is not air escaping except out of the filame
You can make the flame hotter by first, lowering the flame from the starting point by slowly closing the gas valve until the flame is at a medium height. Then, you should increase the oxygen intake by slowly opening the oxygen valve until you have a completely non-luminous flame (an all-blue flame), which is hotter than an orange or yellow flame.
If you open the valve on the bunsen burner fully the flame becomes virtually invisible and therefore there are no interactions between the original flame colour and the colour produced by the chemical.