Sugar burns clean when the right amounts of it is mixed with the opposing oxidizer. Sugar burns into water vapor and carbon dioxide, and leaves behind the remains of the oxidizer reaction. There is no flammable product that sugar leaves behind after it burns. Even if it does, you cannot collect it, as the fire from the burning sugar would just go on to ignite that.
Carbon dioxide is produced when sugar burns.
a. Carbon-
b. Carbon dioxide
c. steam
yes.
The material formed is Carbon.
Burning is a chemical reaction; sugar is transformed in carbon dioxide and water.
Burning or combustion is always a chemical change sugar on burning produce carbon dioxide and water vapours which can neither be again change in sugar, while a physical change is always reversible.
Sugar is formed from molecules and these molecules contain atoms.
Burning of the wick or candle material, thermal dissociation of candle material.
carbohydrates are formed from sugar and provide the body with building material and enrgy.
Not anything; ash is formed only from non-combustible components of a material.
No, burning sugar is exothermic.
Sugar Cane
Honey is pure sugar. Sugar is about the worst for burning fat.
Oxygen is a factor that affects burning. Another factor that affects burning is the material that is burning. If the material isn't combustible, it won't burn.
Carbon dioxide is the product of any burning of an organic material; nitrogen monoxide is produced indirect at the burning of organic materials containg nitrogen.
Why is it different? No, it isn't. Burning sugar is a combustion process.
Burning of sugar release water.
powder
The material formed is Carbon.
Burning is a chemical reaction; sugar is transformed in carbon dioxide and water.