Other oxidizers besides oxygen can be used to produce a flame. Hydrogen burning in chlorine produces a flame and in the process emits gaseous hydrogen chloride (HCl) as the combustion product.[3] Another of many possible chemical combinations is hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide which is hypergolic and commonly used in rocket engines. Fluoropolymers can be used to supply fluorine as an oxidizer of metallic fuels, e.g. in the magnesium/Teflon/viton composition.
Fire is not a substance. The flames associated with a fire are glowing gases (a plasma) produced by a chemical reaction (combustion) in the fire itself. The gas are divisible into various substance (carbon dioxide, unburned hydrocarbons etc.)
Fire is the rapid oxidation of a material in the chemical process of combustion, releasing heat, light, and various reaction products.
The matter definition of fire is plasma. It is neither a solid, liquid, nor gas.
A combustible substance will burn easily when on fire, A flammable substance can easily catch fire.
Fire
combustion
Me
You think probable to carbon monoxide, CO.
The Substance of Fire was created in 1996.
A combustible substance will burn easily when on fire, A flammable substance can easily catch fire.
No, fire is not a substance that can be frozen. It is a process.
None, fire is not a substance thus can't be in a state of matter, fire (combustion) is the process in which a substance burn, release gas, and turn into a new substance.
Fire is not an alkane or any substance in particular. Fire is a reaction between a flammable substance and an oxygen. All alkanes are flammable, but there are other flammable substances as well.
Water
Fire
When fire is produce the substance is burned and the obtained substance is having property completely different from previous one.
It is in classical mythology, but not in reality. In reality fire is not even a substance but a chemical reaction between oxygen and some flammable substance.
ash.
combustion
Fire is not an alkane or any substance in particular. Fire is a reaction between a flammable substance and an oxygen. All alkanes are flammable, but there are other flammable substances as well.