When you burn coal.
what flamw leaves soot on the apparatus
Soot is the product of an incomplete combustion of carbon.
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.
When you burn coal.
flames produces light enery co,co2,and other compounds
Yunardi has written: 'Modelling soot formation and oxidation in turbulent non-premixed flames'
The propane grills flames yellow and cause soot buildup due to a excessive dirtying of the vents.
yes of coures they do
Yellow flames typically indicate an incomplete combustion process, due to a lack of oxygen or inefficient burning of fuel. They tend to be cooler compared to blue flames and can produce more soot and pollutants. Yellow flames can be a sign of a malfunctioning gas appliance or poor ventilation.
No, not all fires have flames. Fires can exist in different forms, such as smoldering or glowing without visible flames. The presence of flames depends on the type of fuel, oxygen availability, and combustion conditions.
Yes, non-luminous flames produce less carbon residue compared to luminous flames. These flames have the right amount of oxygen for combustion, resulting in more complete burning of the fuel and less soot or carbon deposit.
Non- Luminous can burn efficiently because luminous flames don't burn as efficiently as non-luminous ones, they don't produce as much energy. This means that the non-luminous flames have a lot more energy than luminous ones, and their flames are actually hotter. This is why the luminous ones look yellow and the non-luminous ones look blue. Hotter flames burn blue and (relatively) cooler ones burn yellow.