Pink to crimson red.
I dont know! Ancient Greek
Flame colours come from alkai metals reacting with salts to produce different colours.
Lithium shows Crimson red and Potassium shows Lilac (pale violet)
Lithium (Li) is the alkali metal that reacts most slowly with water. It is the first alkali metal and thus, the least reactive of the group. The lithium metal is seen to dart around the surface of the water with some whzzing and effervescence of hydrogen gas. The heat produced from the reaction may not be sufficient to ignite the hydrogen gas, resulting in no flame, compared to other metals like sodium and potassium where the reaction would be more violet and the metal would quickly catch fire.
It reacts scarily with water And has a crimson coloured flame It helps quite moody people Lithium is the name!
it depends on what is in the alkali, sodium, calcium, lithium all turn different colours, I believe lithium turns purple, an alkali is a compound with hydroxide ie sodium hydroxide is NaOH
Potassium is the only metal (alkali metal) where a flame is present. Lithium and sodium fizz but there is no flame. Caesium, francium and rubidium all explode on contact with water.
Color is determined by the respective cation: Potassium - lilac Sodium - yellow Lithium - red
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
I dont know! Ancient Greek
The reaction of lithium and water is violent but without a flame.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
Flame Test: heat up with a bunsen burner and the lithium ion fives off a crimson flame, proving it it lithium.
The lithium color of lithium in the flame test is red.