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Mineral Oil has a flash point of 170C (335F), and a boiling point of 310C (590F). By definition, "Flammable liquid" means any liquid having a flashpoint below 100 deg. F. Therefore, Mineral Oil is not a flammable liquid, however it is a Class IIIB Combustible Liquid, meaning that it will burn, but must be exposed to high heat before it will sustain a flame.
An incombustible gas is one that does not burn or explode.(Incombustible means something that cannot be burnt.)Some good examples of incombustible gases arenitrogen (which is fortunate, because 78% of the air is nitrogen, and if nitrogen was combustible, the air would explode!)carbon dioxideargon
Because both components are in any ratio mixable without forming a liquid/liquid-interface (not like the oil/water-interface appearence). In both their polarity is high.
Yes. Any leather will burn.
Because methanol is flammable you need to move it away from any other sources of methanol and other flammable materials before igniting the desired container.
Acids and alkalies are corrosive. Oxidisation is also corrosive. Any liquid or gas which breaks down things at the molecular level can be termed corrosive.
Bath oil is not flammable. It is a health hazard to submerge the body into any sort of flammable liquid and breath the vapors from it.
Mineral Oil has a flash point of 170C (335F), and a boiling point of 310C (590F). By definition, "Flammable liquid" means any liquid having a flashpoint below 100 deg. F. Therefore, Mineral Oil is not a flammable liquid, however it is a Class IIIB Combustible Liquid, meaning that it will burn, but must be exposed to high heat before it will sustain a flame.
No. It is not corrosive by any means.
It is a flammable liquid. The number of ounces of ANY liquid you can carry on board a plane is restricted. They might let you get away with one small vial, if you had no other liquid, and there were not a lot of other suspicious passengers also trying to get flammable materials onto the plane.
Wind erosion, liquid erosion, chemical/corrosive erosion, heat erosion, can't think of any more...
Battery acid is corrosive, so don't get any of it on your skin.
Most nail polish remover has acetone, a VERY flammable liquid in it. If you have acetone on cloth, it should not be put in a washer- not should any other flammable lquid.
Flammabe or not flammable:- gold is not flammable- sulfur is flammable
Corrosive chemicals destroy and damage substances or surfaces which it comes into contact with. When corrosive chemicals come into contact with skin, chemical burns may result and the living tissue may be damaged. As such, corrosive chemicals such as sulfuric acid and potassium hydroxide are dangerous, especially in high concentrations. They can be in any state of matter (solid, liquid or gas). Chlorine gas for instance is an example of a corrosive gas. Protective equipment have to be worn and great precautions be taken when coming into contact with these chemicals.
Xenon is inert and so does not readily react with any substance. As a result, it is cannot be corrosive.
noits not flammable.. you can convert that energy in any of the form....