By using the correct ratio of oxygen and fuel mixture. Opening the air hole in the Bunsen burner increase the oxygen which helps the flame burner hotter .
Turn the collar and the flame will get hotter
The tip of the inner flame is the hottest.
its hotter than a yellow flame
Bunsen burner: Robert Bunsen and Peter Desaga, Heidelberg (Germany), 1855
Because more oxygen is needed for fuel for fire.
because it's hotter.
Robert Bunsen collaborated with his laboratory assistant, Peter Desaga, to develop the Bunsen burner in the 1850s. Desaga was responsible for constructing the burner based on Bunsen's design and ideas.
Sir Robert Bunsen is the man who made the bunsen buner,he made the burner becoz he felt like it
No, Robert Bunsen did not invent the Bunsen burner. It was actually invented by Michael Faraday in the 19th century. The Bunsen burner is named after Bunsen as he helped popularize its use in laboratories.
Opening the air hole in a Bunsen burner allows more air to mix with the gas before combustion, creating a more efficient and hotter flame. This increased supply of oxygen enhances the combustion process, resulting in a higher temperature flame.
you would use the safety flame when not heating anything because the blue flame is for heating because its hotter than yellow.
A man named Michael Faraday created and invented the Bunsen Burner, Robert Bunsen improved it by making the flame cleaner, hotter and non luminous. The Bunsen Burner was named after him, but that does not mean he made it.